1. a path through a forest, field, etc.
2. the marks, signs, smells, etc., that are left behind by someone or something and that can often be followed
Tan9oSuccka wrote: »Give the “trail” people a break.
They’ve been busy buying “drew wax”.
Tan9oSuccka wrote: »Give the “trail” people a break.
They’ve been busy buying “drew wax”.
isnt it dreg?
If vet Maelstrom Arena is vMA, why the heck vet Dragonstar Arena is always called vDSA, and not vDA? Why??
Dapper Dinosaur wrote: »I expect everyone I see that can't handle basic words or phrases (ranging from you're/your and they're/their/there to "could care less") to be a moron.
I am rarely disappointed.
Dapper Dinosaur wrote: »I expect everyone I see that can't handle basic words or phrases (ranging from you're/your and they're/their/there to "could care less") to be a moron.
I am rarely disappointed.
At least ‘you’re/your’ and ‘there/their/they’re’ can be explained by the fact that they are homophones, and native speakers learn the language by hearing it rather than reading it (which most of us do, who learn it as a foreign language). Trial/trail however can’t be excused this way as they are not homophones, heck they are not even minimal pairs.
Whether we want it or not, these mistakes can and will make people assume that the one who made the mistake is a moron. I’m also triggered by ‘should’ve/should of’.
Source(s): I’m a linguist.
monktoasty wrote: »Excuse them if there Grammer is wrong...it aint like they are evil..you wood not like no one too pester you about it if it was you doing it would you
Malestorm Arena or vMSA is worse...
Dapper Dinosaur wrote: »Tan9oSuccka wrote: »Give the “trail” people a break.
They’ve been busy buying “drew wax”.
isnt it dreg?
It is, and the game's NPCs even say it a couple times for you. I've heard so many different ways people say it. Drough, drew, I've even heard dray and dreeg.
Tan9oSuccka wrote: »Give the “trail” people a break.
They’ve been busy buying “drew wax”.
isnt it dreg?
Dapper Dinosaur wrote: »I expect everyone I see that can't handle basic words or phrases (ranging from you're/your and they're/their/there to "could care less") to be a moron.
I am rarely disappointed.
At least ‘you’re/your’ and ‘there/their/they’re’ can be explained by the fact that they are homophones, and native speakers learn the language by hearing it rather than reading it (which most of us do, who learn it as a foreign language). Trial/trail however can’t be excused this way as they are not homophones, heck they are not even minimal pairs.
Whether we want it or not, these mistakes can and will make people assume that the one who made the mistake is a moron. I’m also triggered by ‘should’ve/should of’.
Source(s): I’m a linguist.
Coming to the conclusion that someone is stupid based on a misspelling is a fallacy. A person can’t claim intellectual superiority while making such ridiculous assumptions about other people. Hopefully you never become an English teacher with an attitude like that.Whether we want it or not, these mistakes can and will make people assume that the one who made the mistake is a moron. I’m also triggered by ‘should’ve/should of’.Dapper Dinosaur wrote: »I expect everyone I see that can't handle basic words or phrases (ranging from you're/your and they're/their/there to "could care less") to be a moron.
I am rarely disappointed.
Source(s): I’m a linguist.
SilverIce58 wrote: »At least someone brought it up. Now then, can we talk about Daedra and Deadra? One is a demonic being in the game, and the other isnt even a thing. Like, how fast are you typing that you type the e before the a?
TheNorthernDragon wrote: »So learning to write the language is a separate skill, and spellcheck doesn't pick up these written mistakes caused by English homophones. What about "payed?"
Coming to the conclusion that someone is stupid based on a misspelling is a fallacy. A person can’t claim intellectual superiority while making such ridiculous assumptions about other people. Hopefully you never become an English teacher with an attitude like that.
Coming to the conclusion that someone is stupid based on a misspelling is a fallacy. A person can’t claim intellectual superiority while making such ridiculous assumptions about other people. Hopefully you never become an English teacher with an attitude like that.Whether we want it or not, these mistakes can and will make people assume that the one who made the mistake is a moron. I’m also triggered by ‘should’ve/should of’.Dapper Dinosaur wrote: »I expect everyone I see that can't handle basic words or phrases (ranging from you're/your and they're/their/there to "could care less") to be a moron.
I am rarely disappointed.
Source(s): I’m a linguist.
If vet Maelstrom Arena is vMA, why the heck vet Dragonstar Arena is always called vDSA, and not vDA? Why??
TheNorthernDragon wrote: »So learning to write the language is a separate skill, and spellcheck doesn't pick up these written mistakes caused by English homophones. What about "payed?"
Learning to write a language is indeed different from learning to speak a language. I don't know about your own native language, but in mine, Hungarian, people do spelling mistakes ALL THE TIME. And spell check doesn't help as much as you'd expect it to.
You'd be surprised, but 'payed' is actually a correct English word, although it's not the same as paid, it's the past tense of a special meaning of the verb 'to pay' used in nautical environments. This can explain why spell checking doesn't help with this word. Also 'paid' is irregular, so non-native speakers unsurprisingly make that mistake.