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We should do away with contractions. Their shouldnât be words like, shouldnât, wouldnât, youâre, theyâre, arenât and so on. We should instead use, you are, they are, are not, should not and would not, and so forth. We should also limit new words that make no sense, or destroy the definition of a word. One that comes to mind, in the last 50 years, is the word gay. When my father was a boy, gay meant happy, care free. Now, you know what they want it to mean. We also should try to vilify words, like master bedroom, mother, woman, and more.
Given how frequently this occurs in the comics, one might conclude that comic strip characters, rather than âhearingâ the dialogue, are actually just reading each otherâs speech balloons, and therefore see the misspellings.
oldthang about 11 hours ago
Donât that just burn ya up!
Ahuehuete about 11 hours ago
Who knew that aliens text?
blunebottle about 11 hours ago
Your not the only ones.
(*intentional)
Imagine about 11 hours ago
Hopefully everyone learned their lessonâŠ
electricshadow Premium Member about 10 hours ago
Iâve been called a Grammar N___ a few times, but this is on a different level.
breathfreshair Premium Member about 10 hours ago
Ha. Take that Grammar Police.
The Reader Premium Member about 10 hours ago
Back in days of yoreâŠ
Zykoic about 9 hours ago
Pop up are killing the fun. I may boycot.
Doug K about 8 hours ago
Are they (now) able to see what each other are saying?
âYourâ and âYouâreâ sound the same.
gammaguy about 8 hours ago
He did not see that coming.
BigDaveGlass about 8 hours ago
Clumsy Carbon?
Mediatech about 7 hours ago
As long as yore sure about it.
CountOlaf2.0 Premium Member about 6 hours ago
The Count wonder if he wants to use the bathroom, too, like the one in Garfield
LONNYMARQUEZ about 6 hours ago
Iâm with the space dude on that one
dbrucepm about 5 hours ago
Theyâre, their, there. no need to get nasty
Mugens Premium Member about 5 hours ago
A lot of commentors on GoGomics should heed this strip since there are quite a few who love to play grammar police.
dflak about 4 hours ago
There, theyâre, their.
dflak about 4 hours ago
There is no brawl so violent as a bunch of editors arguing over a comma.
matzam Premium Member about 4 hours ago
princess bride
Windfall35 about 4 hours ago
As in "Whereâs your head?â
sandpiper about 4 hours ago
It was me. Now I am it.
elbow macaroni about 4 hours ago
Itâs not about comprehension, or what is heard. Itâs about spelling.
rockyridge1977 about 3 hours ago
Spoke way too soon!!!!
bobtoledo Premium Member about 3 hours ago
Thatâs American English for youâŠ
mindjob about 2 hours ago
Beats getting an anal probe
Wizard of Ahz-no relation about 2 hours ago
there are three ways to wright their/theyâre/there but if you were writing out the sentence which would you choose?
DJohnny about 2 hours ago
The Men in Black zapper came in my mind⊠:/
johnaapc about 1 hour ago
Yes, incomprehensible, One hears words, not see them.
serial232 about 1 hour ago
We should do away with contractions. Their shouldnât be words like, shouldnât, wouldnât, youâre, theyâre, arenât and so on. We should instead use, you are, they are, are not, should not and would not, and so forth. We should also limit new words that make no sense, or destroy the definition of a word. One that comes to mind, in the last 50 years, is the word gay. When my father was a boy, gay meant happy, care free. Now, you know what they want it to mean. We also should try to vilify words, like master bedroom, mother, woman, and more.
franish2bzn about 1 hour ago
âMother Englishâ by Bill Bryson.
wildlandwaters 40 minutes ago
so⊠you were saying??
DKHenderson 13 minutes ago
Given how frequently this occurs in the comics, one might conclude that comic strip characters, rather than âhearingâ the dialogue, are actually just reading each otherâs speech balloons, and therefore see the misspellings.