DC should stick to doing their animated movies. Love them. Marvel should continue doing their live action ones. While I didn't care for Avengers, on balance, they have excelled at their live action movies.
DC should stick to doing their animated movies. Love them. Marvel should continue doing their live action ones. While I didn't care for Avengers, on balance, they have excelled at their live action movies.
I'll just leave this here. Oh childhood.
I agree, I always preferred dragonair to dragonite. In the original, I could not justify a 4x weakness to ice and I still got hyperbeam regardless.
I will say this: I can pick up and play Demons Souls any time and still enjoy the hell out of it. My old PS3 died and I lost my Dark Souls; I quickly started three new characters and enjoyed the hell out of them finishing the game three times with each.
Is it just me or is this guy's cadence just like Top Gear's Richard Hammond?
Hi! Thanks for the response. I think that we have been mixing up the arguments a bit here, and this is my fault.
I like Vin Diesel as much as the next guy. Iron Giant anyone? But, man, I really hope his acting isn't too wooden in this one.
Man I love the silverhawks!!
Indeed. Upon viewing that image, I too got a tallgeese
But Marc Alice has a point. Sam Wilson is new the captain america, so eventually his identity and backstory may be overshadowed by the mantle that he has taken over. On the other hand, he could be seen as an inferior captain america - which just is another way of saying that the mantle is too good for him. Either…
Clearly, it's not 16bit quality.
So this is really interesting. In all honesty. Over time our acceptance of the split infinitive has changed. This is the consensus, yes?
Perhaps my joke hit a wall...
You are correct that grammarians believed that splitting the infinitive was a no-no based on an erroneous belief that English infinitives could not and should not be split.
I agree that using "to not" and "not to" can put a somewhat different emphasis, though I don't quite agree with your conclusion. Negation is interesting because, yes, as you say, it depends, generally, on what you are negating. Here are some, I think, good examples of how you have to be careful what you negate: