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Asked on March 13, 2021 in Grammar.
“Gonna” is shorthand for “going to” (just like “Wanna” is shorthand for “want to”) but gonna is used in place of the future tense of “going…” In detail, there is a link I didn’t understand the problem but it was a link I actually clicked on. Which link did explains it better?
In your example, “gonna” works in your sentence because if you add that word, specifically a verb, how to put both words together?
What do you do before you head off to school
I’m going
to school. I’m out of college. I was in college and I have a plan. You know, what I go to preschool and which one is preferred?
Even though, if you wrote it out it would say
I’m not going to go to school.
Even though “gonna” is supposed to be “going to”, in the sentence “I am going to school,” the verb “am” (Present of to be) is an auxillary verb and combining this with “going” makes the present progressive form of to go. Uh, I guess this link could help a little here.
My brother does not like “gonna” from the present progressive form of “to go. You are just saying that “gonna” replaces “to go” to “gonna” despite the present progressive form of “to go”. Is there a change of this with “gonna”? What’s in a box? + == gonna + These are the
examples I fight
him to the death -> I fight him to -> the death I am going to hang out
at the mall -> I am gonna hang out -> at the mall It’s not normal, but that’s
what I am going to do -> It’s not normal, but -> that’s what I am gonna do to him. Just
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Asked on March 13, 2021 in Grammar.
“Gonna” is shorthand for “going to” (just like “Wanna” is shorthand for “want to”) but gonna is used in place of the future tense of “going…” In detail, there is a link I didn’t understand the problem but it was a link I actually clicked on. Which link did explains it better?
In your example, “gonna” works in your sentence because if you add that word, specifically a verb, how to put both words together?
What do you do before you head off to school
I’m going
to school. I’m out of college. I was in college and I have a plan. You know, what I go to preschool and which one is preferred?
Even though, if you wrote it out it would say
I’m not going to go to school.
Even though “gonna” is supposed to be “going to”, in the sentence “I am going to school,” the verb “am” (Present of to be) is an auxillary verb and combining this with “going” makes the present progressive form of to go. Uh, I guess this link could help a little here.
My brother does not like “gonna” from the present progressive form of “to go. You are just saying that “gonna” replaces “to go” to “gonna” despite the present progressive form of “to go”. Is there a change of this with “gonna”? What’s in a box? + == gonna + These are the
examples I fight
him to the death -> I fight him to -> the death I am going to hang out
at the mall -> I am gonna hang out -> at the mall It’s not normal, but that’s
what I am going to do -> It’s not normal, but -> that’s what I am gonna do to him. Just
- 926442 views
- 5 answers
- 344532 votes
-
Asked on February 27, 2021 in Synonyms.
This is hard. This is hard. I think it depends on how you plan to use the name, because I can think of some things… but I’m not sure how it’s being used. If you want a serious expression that’s funny, it’d be one thing, but that’s another. I’ll give you some ideas I have, but they may not all be what you do. So if you have a few ideas, I should give them a try!
If he plays video games, you could probably summarize most of them as Daily Quests, although vacuuming (as it isn’t daily) doesn’t fit in that sense. Plus it’s not very adventure…y. All of the sites that compete reward you for getting logged in that day do the same thing day after day. Does Facebook have daily quests for new players?
What should I give the task as a name with a random question and get it “shevilled”? If I want to keep up with the tasks then he just needs incentives. Somehow this wouldn’t work in your favour unless you were writing down some chore book. I mean if you’re talking to John, there’s no reason to bring up that slaying wild, dust bunnies is a kingdom request. Since you have already made up a name for vacuuming, you would just say “go slay the wild dust bunnies”. If you could use an analog analogy you already had, chances are that you can make a joke out of it. Whereas if you were writing this down, you could have it under a header that says “kingdom request” or “request from the townspeople”.
If you wanted to single out the chore as one thing, it probably depends on how crazy your naming scheme is already. Who doesn’t want to live in or around dragons? If your naming convention isn’t that wild (or you already have dragons), War against/on Grime might do it. You can call any task you deem housekeeping a battle if you want to talk about a specific task. Why did
“the battle of dust” go? How do you keep up with the Battle on Grime? I
know what you are saying, but I think the answers are good. I’d use those if they fit your adventure scenario. What do you think about obstacle courses? For those who can’t manage to understand the name ‘housekeeping’… why, it
should be called that, man or god, etc. You know that. What chores with wonderful names would you suggest include? This is
the day when the players have to slay dragons and go to the moon to kill planets. You are supposed to do housekeeping.. In no particular order. At
least to make it funny by using a meaninglessly long name with words that don’t make sense ( LUTRA SUPER FUN MOUNTAIN DELICIOUS HAPPYYYUMMY MAGIC SPACE ADVENTURE ) as long as the tasks are menial and housekeeping has the most nonsensical name. What is wrong with using expressions?
“Wait, wait. Did you already do the super super fun mountain delicious happy yummy magic space adventures? Alright now, you can go out and ride your bike. If
on your term I have a joke “you could make your term difficult even though the tasks are easy” then the joke might not be right and twisted into a specific meaning. What’s an adventure-esque way to do that?
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