That's right.
That's right.
Uh, that's kind of what I meant. His book was fine, and more honest than most. But he never gave this reader the idea that he was particularly smart or talented, just that he'd done the work and put in the time. Had he just left it at that and gone to law school and become a dentist, well, fine. But he didn't.
Sperm.
Not that she's gonna stop talking afterwards, mind you.
I'd recommend David Brock's book. He doesn't seem like a bad guy, and what he has to say about how the partisan-opinion sausage gets made is interesting. He does examination to come up with some plausible reasons why he did the things he did, and then how rough it got for him when he tried to change course…
That's right.
So was just about everybody at trance sets, though. Okay, some fans might have been "detoxing" to "get back in touch with their most natural selves," but they're so loony that it hardly looked or felt different.
That whole "Perry is a trance DJ" was kinda weird.
So now they're asking people to pay ridiculously inflated IMAX prices to watch some fucking teevee? Have they no shame? They'll probably show 'em some commercials beforehand, too.
Eh, Jane's Addiction did it first. Also, incomprehensible folk-religion auto-threesomes.
I was sort of disappointed that Sean did not include this video with this wonderful article:
True enough, but that usually happens in the third person. Are we talking about using it in the first or third person? A friend of a friend who's transitioning actually uses "they" to refer to him/herself, which just seems excessive to me. Perhaps I'm misunderstanding something here.
Cats, actually. One's a Siamese with complex emotional needs.
Youse, if you please. I'm a Massachusetts-American.
Please don't smack my gender. My gender's tender.
I suggest "dud."
Dios, sos un grande. Mejor que River, che. Sos mejor que mi viejo.
I shalléis be refered to in the Spanish "vosotros" form that nobody in Latin America gives a damn about but has to learn in junior high anyway.
That's what they say!
I can actually see this from a grammatical point of view, as "his or her" is unbelievably cumbersome, which is why you want to say "students may take their books with them." But a friend of a friend who is transitioning using "they" for his/herself seems a bit much. It sounds unbearably presumptuous, especially when…