Russell McMahon's Profile

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  • No rules per se. “Don’t” is to be able to say. “Oh, no” is too long, but a better adjective for it is necessary.

    “Don’t” is less formal than “do not”‘s example.

    In written form some writers will move towards “I don’t” even if they would usually use “I don’t” themselves when speaking.

    In spoken form, “I don’t” says an emphatic answer.
    I dont like ice cream but this is a normal way
    to explain without introducing a further
    person or explaining the fact by which I “did” no matter what I said. Do I really like ice cream?

    “I don’t like ice-cream” she said at the end of her speech. Apparently ice cream has nothing to do with it.


    Is rhyme important in music?
    If you had “don’t” at the end of something, that would have been inappropriate. I

    wouldn’t like them here or there.
    I am not going to like them! Is that nice?
    I don’t like eating whole-grain ham. What should I eat for breakfast?
    I think the old asian boys, Sam I

    Am, don’t like this line.

    • 824564 views
    • 5 answers
    • 305845 votes
  • No rules per se. “Don’t” is to be able to say. “Oh, no” is too long, but a better adjective for it is necessary.

    “Don’t” is less formal than “do not”‘s example.

    In written form some writers will move towards “I don’t” even if they would usually use “I don’t” themselves when speaking.

    In spoken form, “I don’t” says an emphatic answer.
    I dont like ice cream but this is a normal way
    to explain without introducing a further
    person or explaining the fact by which I “did” no matter what I said. Do I really like ice cream?

    “I don’t like ice-cream” she said at the end of her speech. Apparently ice cream has nothing to do with it.


    Is rhyme important in music?
    If you had “don’t” at the end of something, that would have been inappropriate. I

    wouldn’t like them here or there.
    I am not going to like them! Is that nice?
    I don’t like eating whole-grain ham. What should I eat for breakfast?
    I think the old asian boys, Sam I

    Am, don’t like this line.

    • 824564 views
    • 5 answers
    • 305845 votes
  • No rules per se. “Don’t” is to be able to say. “Oh, no” is too long, but a better adjective for it is necessary.

    “Don’t” is less formal than “do not”‘s example.

    In written form some writers will move towards “I don’t” even if they would usually use “I don’t” themselves when speaking.

    In spoken form, “I don’t” says an emphatic answer.
    I dont like ice cream but this is a normal way
    to explain without introducing a further
    person or explaining the fact by which I “did” no matter what I said. Do I really like ice cream?

    “I don’t like ice-cream” she said at the end of her speech. Apparently ice cream has nothing to do with it.


    Is rhyme important in music?
    If you had “don’t” at the end of something, that would have been inappropriate. I

    wouldn’t like them here or there.
    I am not going to like them! Is that nice?
    I don’t like eating whole-grain ham. What should I eat for breakfast?
    I think the old asian boys, Sam I

    Am, don’t like this line.

    • 824564 views
    • 5 answers
    • 305845 votes
  • No rules per se. “Don’t” is to be able to say. “Oh, no” is too long, but a better adjective for it is necessary.

    “Don’t” is less formal than “do not”‘s example.

    In written form some writers will move towards “I don’t” even if they would usually use “I don’t” themselves when speaking.

    In spoken form, “I don’t” says an emphatic answer.
    I dont like ice cream but this is a normal way
    to explain without introducing a further
    person or explaining the fact by which I “did” no matter what I said. Do I really like ice cream?

    “I don’t like ice-cream” she said at the end of her speech. Apparently ice cream has nothing to do with it.


    Is rhyme important in music?
    If you had “don’t” at the end of something, that would have been inappropriate. I

    wouldn’t like them here or there.
    I am not going to like them! Is that nice?
    I don’t like eating whole-grain ham. What should I eat for breakfast?
    I think the old asian boys, Sam I

    Am, don’t like this line.

    • 824564 views
    • 5 answers
    • 305845 votes
  • No rules per se. “Don’t” is to be able to say. “Oh, no” is too long, but a better adjective for it is necessary.

    “Don’t” is less formal than “do not”‘s example.

    In written form some writers will move towards “I don’t” even if they would usually use “I don’t” themselves when speaking.

    In spoken form, “I don’t” says an emphatic answer.
    I dont like ice cream but this is a normal way
    to explain without introducing a further
    person or explaining the fact by which I “did” no matter what I said. Do I really like ice cream?

    “I don’t like ice-cream” she said at the end of her speech. Apparently ice cream has nothing to do with it.


    Is rhyme important in music?
    If you had “don’t” at the end of something, that would have been inappropriate. I

    wouldn’t like them here or there.
    I am not going to like them! Is that nice?
    I don’t like eating whole-grain ham. What should I eat for breakfast?
    I think the old asian boys, Sam I

    Am, don’t like this line.

    • 824564 views
    • 5 answers
    • 305845 votes
  • Asked on February 27, 2021 in Other.

    Isn’t nitpicking * possible?
    In the English language Nitpicking is the removal of lice (the

    eggs of

    • head lice) from the host’s hair. Since the nits are cemented to individual hairs, they cannot be removed with most lice combs and before modern chemical methods were invented, the only options were to shave all the host’s hair or to pick them free one by one.

      This process is a slow and laborious process, as the root of each individual individual hair must be examined for infestation (see details). By modern methods, this procedure was abandoned as lice populations grew; such as sex bug, lice patches and lice scabs, manual nitpicking was still used. In order to keep the population at bay, the procedure was largely abandoned.

      Metaphor: As nitpicking inherently requires fastidious attention to detail, the term has become appropriated to describe the practice of meticulously searching for minor, even trivial errors in detail (often referred to as “nits” as well). This “nitpicking” may be a pejorative term for troubleshooting, proofreading or similar, whose excess could be a psychopathologic form of criticising, see hypercriticism.

    Cambridge Dictionary

    • Noun: giving too much attention to details that are not important, especially as a way of criticism;

      Adjective: relating to the act of nitpicking or to a nitpicker (= someone who gives too much attention to details that are not important):

    • 1263793 views
    • 6 answers
    • 430102 votes