Larry Johnson made a good prediction in the HuffPost back in February: William Ayers is an unrepentant terrorist, though he is normally described as a distinguished education professor. ... Ayers did not toss medals, he threw bombs. Real ones. Bombs that exploded. ... Do you think that Republicans will ignore Obama's ties to Ayers? ... William Ayers, in the age of terrorism, will be Barack Obama's Willie Horton. You don't say.
This justs adds another halo to God-bama in the temples of Planet Pepe. What's cooler to a Ricain Hater than a buttbuddy of a Ricain Hater Who Proudly Bombs Ricains? The White House- Versailles conjunction will be a Blast.
Incidentally, n_a, if you want, you can get posting privs here. Then you can whole pages devoted to calling Arelcao Assininus whatever you want. He'll return the favor. We're used to it.
[1] "Are you capable of constructing a sentence that does not contain labels but instead uses english words?"
[2]" label, to classify or designate"
If n_a carefully rubs his two little neurons together, getting a wee momentary connecting spark which might fool a dung beetle that there be a wit, he'll see that he's just argued that words that classify or designate are not English words.
Now back to the fascination of reading "Neocon Children of Satan", "It's the Upticka Economy, Stupid", "The Authoritative Wikipedia Dictionary of English" [now Label Free!], and other pseudo-Larouchedia
In my experience, it's typically pinkos who use the word "label" in the sense that anyone calling them pinkos is just applying a label -- with the implied meaning this has no basis in fact. I, for one, never use the word in that sense, since I think it got corrupted by that kind of usage.
As for English (or French, or whatever) -- the word is always capitalized in English. For someone to give lessons in English usage and write the word as "english" is simply rich.
16 comments:
Larry Johnson made a good prediction in the HuffPost back in February: William Ayers is an unrepentant terrorist, though he is normally described as a distinguished education professor. ... Ayers did not toss medals, he threw bombs. Real ones. Bombs that exploded. ... Do you think that Republicans will ignore Obama's ties to Ayers? ... William Ayers, in the age of terrorism, will be Barack Obama's Willie Horton. You don't say.
This justs adds another halo to God-bama in the temples of Planet Pepe. What's cooler to a Ricain Hater than a buttbuddy of a Ricain Hater Who Proudly Bombs Ricains? The White House- Versailles conjunction will be a Blast.
Are you capable of constructing a sentence that does not contain labels but instead uses english words?
Maybe there is a point under that. I used one label and JJ removed my post, oh sour grapes.
Define "label". And, what are "english [sic!] words"?
label,
to classify or designate
english words can be found in a dictionary including Wikipedia
I don't remember removing anyone's posts or comments except outsiders trying to sell junk or wanting to link blogs.
Incidentally, n_a, if you want, you can get posting privs here. Then you can whole pages devoted to calling Arelcao Assininus whatever you want. He'll return the favor. We're used to it.
How generous to cite your own post about this story though I am the one originating it. You learn that practice in the Math community?
n_a has this beaut of a concatenation:
[1] "Are you capable of constructing a sentence that does not contain labels but instead uses english words?"
[2]" label,
to classify or designate"
If n_a carefully rubs his two little neurons together, getting a wee momentary connecting spark which might fool a dung beetle that there be a wit, he'll see that he's just argued that words that classify or designate are not English words.
Now back to the fascination of reading "Neocon Children of Satan", "It's the Upticka Economy, Stupid", "The Authoritative Wikipedia Dictionary of English" [now Label Free!], and other pseudo-Larouchedia
In my experience, it's typically pinkos who use the word "label" in the sense that anyone calling them pinkos is just applying a label -- with the implied meaning this has no basis in fact. I, for one, never use the word in that sense, since I think it got corrupted by that kind of usage.
As for English (or French, or whatever) -- the word is always capitalized in English. For someone to give lessons in English usage and write the word as "english" is simply rich.
What about in billiards? Then it's sometimes spelled 'english'.
spin your way out of that one, roumanian pastrami
Choke on spinning Gustav wezzle, Tejpono
that hurt
What language are you guys speaking? Non comprendo.
pastramian
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