RE:winning! I love winning
Posted on: February 12, 2025 at 15:20:19 CT
Achmed MU
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Each of these pairs has different meanings/nuances despite using the same words. Here’s the breakdown for you lying jg.
1. “An appointment having man” vs. “A man having an appointment.”
• “An appointment having man” is grammatically incorrect or highly unusual in the English language. If anything, it suggests that an appointment possesses or includes a man, which doesn’t make much sense kind of like you jg.
• “A man having an appointment” clearly means that a man has (or possesses) an appointment, which is the natural way to phrase this idea in English.
2. “Keep on truckin” vs. “Keep truckin on.”
• “Keep on truckin” is a well-known phrase meaning to persist, continue working, or push forward, often associated with a laid-back, 70’s era vibe.
• “Keep truckin on” is less common and sounds slightly off grammatically - again like you jg. If used, it would still suggest continuing forward, but “truckin on” isn’t a standard phrase the way “keep on truckin” is.
3. “I’m bad” vs. “I’m bad.”
• The phrase “I’m bad” can have two distinct meanings based on tone and context:
1. Literal meaning: “I am not good” or “I have done something wrong.”
2. Colloquial/slang meaning: Often associated with confidence or swagger (e.g., Michael Jackson’s Bad), meaning “I am tough,” “I am cool,” or “I am impressive.”
• The difference between these two meanings comes down to tone, emphasis, and context.
You are pathetic jg.
Fear the camel soy boy