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Totally OT: I have no time for drunk drivers
In article , Ginge
wrote: In article , Allan Bennett says... In article , pseudoplatypus wrote: The plod go out looking for drunks at xmas. Other times of year, detection is left to the safety cameras. I thought that would have been obvious. Obvious - but completely wrong. Check your spelling, bloody useless drunk driver So, how long have you been trying to use English for, sonny? That should read: "So, for how long have you been trying to use English, sonny?" Prepositions are not words to end sentences with. But in both cases the sentence ends with "sonny". Cor! You write good, dunnit? 1. "Prepositions are not words to end sentences with." is an example of irony. In your case, wasted irony. 2. Try to use punctuation correctly: ie "But, in both cases..." 3. Try to understand sentence formation - and for what commas can be used - got that, sonny? (expl: both sentences end with ", sonny", not just "sonny". 4. And never start a sentence with a conjunction. Let that be a lesson to you. Allan Bennett Not a fan of corrective institutions -- |
Totally OT: I have no time for drunk drivers
In article , Allan Bennett says...
In article , Ginge wrote: But in both cases the sentence ends with "sonny". Cor! You write good, dunnit? aussie accent Best 'ad to say it though, but. /aussie accent 1. "Prepositions are not words to end sentences with." is an example of irony. In your case, wasted irony. 2. Try to use punctuation correctly: ie "But, in both cases..." It seems you imagine my speech would pause after the word 'but', is that the case? I wrote that line exactly as I'd say the sentence, I'd not pause after the word 'but'. 3. Try to understand sentence formation - and for what commas can be used - got that, sonny? (expl: both sentences end with ", sonny", not just "sonny". I can see how if I'd written something along the lines of - 'The sky is blue. But, sometimes clouds obscure the sky.' the word 'But,' would be correct, in that context it sounds correct. In a single sentence I'd not make a pause, there's no point in doing so, it's a one line interruption. 4. And never start a sentence with a conjunction. Let that be a lesson to you. Boring, boring, boring. You and Des should meet up. |
Totally OT: I have no time for drunk drivers
joe parkin wrote ...
sorry to be agreeing with Sir Tony mode ON You can let off a bomb in Trafalgar Square, and depending on chance, and the time at which you let it off, no one gets hurt. A 'victimless crime' ? Drunk driving is only 'victimless' as long as you're lucky enough not to wipe someone out. That argument goes for any type of driving, driving is an accident waiting to happen, a pedestrian stepping out etc. Drink driving increases the risk of it happening but so does driving more miles, or driving tired, or lighting a tab etc. Erm, wrong. 'Driving' in itself is not 'a crime'. So therefore, it can't be 'a victimless crime'. -- genuine_froggie |****#1 YGL#4 YFC#1 YFB#1 UKRMMA#14 two#38 |BONY#48 ANORAK#11 Yamaha YZF-R1, FJR1300i, GSX1400i, 996i (for sale) |
Totally OT: I have no time for drunk drivers
Ginge wrote ...
{ snip } You and Des should meet up. Why, so that I can kick him up and down the newsgroup ? Come on, Ginge: my spelling and grammar flames are _class_. -- genuine_froggie |****#1 YGL#4 YFC#1 YFB#1 UKRMMA#14 two#38 |BONY#48 ANORAK#11 Yamaha YZF-R1, FJR1300i, GSX1400i, 996i (for sale) |
Totally OT: I have no time for drunk drivers
wrote
joe parkin wrote ... sorry to be agreeing with Sir Tony mode ON You can let off a bomb in Trafalgar Square, and depending on chance, and the time at which you let it off, no one gets hurt. A 'victimless crime' ? Drunk driving is only 'victimless' as long as you're lucky enough not to wipe someone out. That argument goes for any type of driving, driving is an accident waiting to happen, a pedestrian stepping out etc. Drink driving increases the risk of it happening but so does driving more miles, or driving tired, or lighting a tab etc. Erm, wrong. 'Driving' in itself is not 'a crime'. So therefore, it can't be 'a victimless crime'. It has been a long time since you have been a UK resident and it shows. -- steve auvache |
Totally OT: I have no time for drunk drivers
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Totally OT: I have no time for drunk drivers
In article , Ginge
wrote: In article , Allan Bennett says... In article , Ginge wrote: But in both cases the sentence ends with "sonny". Cor! You write good, dunnit? aussie accent Best 'ad to say it though, but. /aussie accent 1. "Prepositions are not words to end sentences with." is an example of irony. In your case, wasted irony. 2. Try to use punctuation correctly: ie "But, in both cases..." It seems you imagine my speech would pause after the word 'but', is that the case? I wrote that line exactly as I'd say the sentence, I'd not pause after the word 'but'. I did not imagine anything. Just because you don't talk proper doesn't mean that not writing proper should be a natural consequence. 3. Try to understand sentence formation - and for what commas can be used - got that, sonny? (expl: both sentences end with ", sonny", not just "sonny". I can see how if I'd written something along the lines of - 'The sky is blue. But, sometimes clouds obscure the sky.' the word 'But,' would be correct, in that context it sounds correct. Invoke article 4: 4. And never start a sentence with a conjunction. Rules for correct written English are not governed by what 'sounds correct' to you. In a single sentence I'd not make a pause, there's no point in doing so, it's a one line interruption. Errrk! Could you repeat that, using sensible punctuation, so that it makes sense to the reader rather than just the speaker? Perhaps not. 4. And never start a sentence with a conjunction. Let that be a lesson to you. Boring, boring, boring. Ah! The simple, cheap, throwaway line. Always useful when you have no lucid argument to offer. Allan Bennett Not a fan of bad examples -- |
Totally OT: I have no time for drunk drivers
In article , Allan Bennett says...
In article , Ginge It seems you imagine my speech would pause after the word 'but', is that the case? I wrote that line exactly as I'd say the sentence, I'd not pause after the word 'but'. I did not imagine anything. Just because you don't talk proper doesn't mean that not writing proper should be a natural consequence. How do you know I don't talk properly, have we met? :-) When on Usenet I generally reply in a quickly typed, highly informal, conversational style. I never spell-check and I very rarely proof read - there are better things to waste my time upon. I find the informal approach lends itself to the kind of lively banter often seen in uk.rec.motorcycles, the newsgroup where I'm currently reading this delightful cross-post. In a single sentence I'd not make a pause, there's no point in doing so, it's a one line interruption. Errrk! Could you repeat that, using sensible punctuation, so that it makes sense to the reader rather than just the speaker? Perhaps not. Treat it as though I was rudely interupting your diatribe, butting in without drawing a single breath. "Anyhow, I see no point in carrying on with this... ....At least not until I find my ingerlish teecher and sew hymn fer knot teaching me write.... I were just a GCSE guinea-pig, for crying out loud... They aint not teached us nuffink!" |
Totally OT: I have no time for drunk drivers
Allan Bennett wrote:
In article , wrote: Allan Bennett wrote in message : In article , pseudoplatypus wrote: The plod go out looking for drunks at xmas. Other times of year, detection is left to the safety cameras. I thought that would have been obvious. Obvious - but completely wrong. Check your spelling, bloody useless drunk driver So, how long have you been trying to use English for, sonny? That should read: "So, for how long have you been trying to use English, sonny?" Prepositions are not words to end sentences with. Allan Bennett Not a fan of pseuds in glass houses Gosh, you're smart. Care to work out how to use a sig seperator? No thanks. I prefer the more technically correct 'separator'. Actually, though, I have an atomagical one ITYM automagical - but it ain't clever enough to formulate original stuff based on the content of the post - and I don't use sigs, they're bad for your health. Allan Bennett Not a fan of burnt offerings That would be a sig -- Catman MIB#14 SKoGA#6 TEAR#4 BOTAFOF#38 Apostle#21 Tyger, Tyger Burning Bright (Remove rust to reply) Alfa 116 Giulietta 3.0l (Really) Sprint 1.7 Triumph Speed Triple: Black with extra black bits www.cuore-sportivo.co.uk |
Totally OT: I have no time for drunk drivers
Allan Bennett wrote:
In article , Ginge wrote: snip Boring, boring, boring. Ah! The simple, cheap, throwaway line. Always useful when you have no lucid argument to offer. But *oh* so true in your case Allan Bennett Not a fan of bad examples That would be the sig you don't use again -- That, on the other hand, would be the sig separator that is a) Broken b) In the wrong place. -- Catman MIB#14 SKoGA#6 TEAR#4 BOTAFOF#38 Apostle#21 Tyger, Tyger Burning Bright (Remove rust to reply) Alfa 116 Giulietta 3.0l (Really) Sprint 1.7 Triumph Speed Triple: Black with extra black bits www.cuore-sportivo.co.uk |
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