Brittany_Joy wrote: »
Maybe they will release the actual Breton Costume, instead of their late April Fools Joke.
Brittany_Joy wrote: »
Hm, I am not a native english speaker - to use "concurrent" in this context sounds weird to me, I think it should be "consistent", but maybe I am interpreting "at the same time" in a different way - concurrent means to me exactly at the same time (as in "in parallel"), not in a continued form like on the 1st of May and the 1st of July - some clarification on the proper use by a native english speaker would be appreciated.
Brittany_Joy wrote: »Brittany_Joy wrote: »
Hm, I am not a native english speaker - to use "concurrent" in this context sounds weird to me, I think it should be "consistent", but maybe I am interpreting "at the same time" in a different way - concurrent means to me exactly at the same time (as in "in parallel"), not in a continued form like on the 1st of May and the 1st of July - some clarification on the proper use by a native english speaker would be appreciated.
Don't forget, hyper correction is a thing too. Concurrent just means what it means; happens at the same time. Consistent also means what it means; process in effect over a period of time. Just say what it means in full; "It is recent and happens at the same time" vs "It is recent and the process is in effect over a period of time" one kinda gets the point across and the other not so much.
I was hoping they would have released it yesterday, so I could have seen what is coming and decide if I wanted to buy the stuff that is leaving or to save my crowns for the stuff that is coming next month.
Too bad
Sylveria_Relden wrote: »Of course, I've pretty much given up hope personally that they'll just magically "come to their senses", it seems these days with companies complaints just get you the "silent treatment" and they keep on going business as usual until someone either serves them with a proper lawsuit or government intervenes.
Brittany_Joy wrote: »
Hm, I am not a native english speaker - to use "concurrent" in this context sounds weird to me, I think it should be "consistent", but maybe I am interpreting "at the same time" in a different way - concurrent means to me exactly at the same time (as in "in parallel"), not in a continued form like on the 1st of May and the 1st of July - some clarification on the proper use by a native english speaker would be appreciated.