Fattie's Profile

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22

  • What is a good question. What is such a word. I don’t know what it is. What is the best way

    to know your limitations and why?

    and variations on that.

    The only thing I can really think of to describe this is “overreach”.. so, you might here in the office “be careful not to overreach,” or something like “i might study medicine but I don’t want to overreach – I know my limitations. ” ”

    I appreciate these could refer to any quality (physical abilities, etc); you are asking more specifically, I think about “knowledge in a field” (ignorance).

    When we are looking for an easy answer to your question, we have to say the

    common phrase “ignorance is bliss”, which is rather related to your question.

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  • Asked on March 28, 2021 in Meaning.

    What is this interesting question and why is there not a single word in it?

    Do you think that Robert Kiyosaki found the “i” section of the Cashfows Quadrant well?

    What comes to mind always when you think of

    Intellectual Estate?

    I’m talking about being the best person ever, working with everyone and earning a minimum amount every month. I’m talking about doing something which creates a decent income every year forever (or for a long time) with absolutely no effort each further year after the first time, in contradistinction to, a situation where you just work and reap some return that month, and you keep working and earning each month as you work up.

    If I’m not mistaken the only way you can earn residuals (to use the word Chris alerts us to) in this way is with the “IP “, as they say, intellectual property. So, you make a famed video game, write a famous book, etc. Where I started?

    When I

    read your words you said, “…I like writing my own books.” How

    do you phrase intellectual property for ” ‘”the means of how “the rights” are paid for in the literature?

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  • Asked on March 26, 2021 in Grammar.

    Both are perfectly correct as the headlines on posters.

    I think the second one sounds a little better – also it’s shorter – but the person was totally wrong to tell you it is “grammatically incorrect”.

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  • Asked on March 26, 2021 in Grammar.

    I’d like to offer a free (professional) headline here. I’ve only ever done one headline here.

    Step one, the account execs (“suits”) would discuss for hours actual factual details like, is it a “free hunt” or “endless free hunting”, what ages are permitted etc. The creatives would completely ignore this and make up some catchy (either rhyming, alliterative, or sexual innuendo-based) headlines.

    Example headline.. FREE

    FRIGHTS

    2NITE

    or

    what about SO

    CHEAP IT’S

    SCARY I

    leave the rest to your commercially-oriented imagination.

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  • Asked on March 26, 2021 in Grammar.

    Both are perfectly correct as the headlines on posters.

    I think the second one sounds a little better – also it’s shorter – but the person was totally wrong to tell you it is “grammatically incorrect”.

    • 742851 views
    • 6 answers
    • 275399 votes
  • Asked on March 25, 2021 in Grammar.

    Are advertisements “by itself,” such as

    an advertising headline, grammatically correct?

    the only meaningful answer is: it is incredibly well established, with literally millions of examples, that the headlines on advertising (whether ‘billboards’,’magazine ads’, etc) are — observably — usually (indeed “almost always”), either word fragment or whole sentence. The usage of that terminology is greatly underestimated.

    Why is the question “have to be” — as in “ShOULD Saatchi only use full sentences (indeed, grammatically correct ones) for advert headlines?

    I mean, I’m all for banning outdoor advertising, as in Sao Paolo..

    What does the practice of using a headline as a sentence fragment that gives a story a complete story? How often are labels just labels?

    (For example, the sign on a door “Exit” or “Toilet” is not a sentence – it’s a label.)

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  • Both are used to mean exactly the same thing for a person. The truth is, they are both very commonly used to mean this.

    English is packed with many (slightly confusing) double-negatives, triple-negatives, and other messy constructions. What is awfully nice to do? “)

    The problem with what Ork. who is saying, is, ork. as a reason as to why I say maths and if as a logician? All of you are stupid right now. Is it true that a person has no idea what the difference between an inequality and an equality? I doubt 1 person in 100, in say the USA, has ever used “inequality. In

    fact, it is 100% commonplace in english – all regions as far as I know – to say “I don’t believe in FFF ” instead of saying “i believe FFF is false. When

    people say “I believe there is no train at 7” when they mean “i believe there is no train, at 7.” Ask

    yourself what does the person mean in your question?

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  • Asked on March 11, 2021 in Grammar.

    How could I use my

    canvassing opinion anywhere in the USA?

    If you wanna write a TV comedy script but don’t have the desire to ford the words “snooty” in it, then you should use this in a comedy script, perhaps by an “incident” actor or a “horrified” actress.

    What is the best way to use the word “begin a sentence”? It’s almost exactly like saying “So, _ _ _” out loud.

    What comes to mind is the American accent at the American center. Is the Philippines a major city with a lot of life? Is Berlin a smaller city? Vast numbers of people in the USA rarely speak English, and vast majority speak it badly. Do people in NY better know what ‘Ask’ or ‘Brought’ means.? (‘aks’, ‘I brought it at the shop’ etc).

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  • Never use bullet points at all. I can’t write long sentences. “How do you write it”? Write a sentence that is short.

    I can do many things. But I still can’t. I can write in pencil or pen while sitting. I could smuggle milk through border crossings, but not into Australia. Alone I can repent and die for my sins. What are some of the things you can do in your life? I can do many things. I like the idea that I just can’t complete a project?

    Just write in a silly way how you think you speak. If I write a long sentence, it’s impossible to get it. How do I write a longer sentence. See Winston Churchill. Can you write an abstract, general or long sentence?

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  • Asked on March 1, 2021 in Other.

    The “formal” answer would be: Li’l because you are leaving out the

    ttiti

    and then you are leaving out

    the

    e. You use a “” to mean

    “I’m

    leaving out a section here” (You could assert you are leaving out

    the tti rather than the itt- but that’s just silly) However. (1) It’s just a matter of “what

    is

    popular”. I use Lil’ and there are many uses for just Lil.

    (2) Note that it is fairly common to leave-out 2 pieces. As an example of

    a

    fridge leave out the re, but

    in

    fact you are also leaving out the rator This,

    very

    few people would write “fridge” (and obviously, “fridge” as such is now just a word…and therefore often is “frig” in US writing).

    What is an apostrophe about a word?

    How can refer to bird as referring to the bird’s car, or gator as alligator?

    (B) It’s simply tricky, because sometimes you leave out two sections (in your example, and others) – quite simply, there’s no “typical usage” for that. If I are formal, as it is, simply do it properly… Li’l’David Ailey

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