I did use a word kadagar but I saved seamus the trouble of asterisking part of it out.
"Being pedantic doesn't make you more intelligent, it simply furthers your own self illusion of intelligence, pedanticism does not correlate to intelligence it correlates to an overinflated ego.
Which can be construed as using big words for the simple purpose of sounding more smart no make you smarter it makes you look like a donkey.
And being told by someone in english how they speak to "less brained" people makes me LOL
Anyway I do not agree with you kadagar I believe this study absolute rubbish anyone with an iq above 90 could tell you and a waste of money
Straying away from topic much, are we?
Spoiler Alert, click show to read:
About less brained... I can only go by (as I am at the computer) the Merriam Webster's. From that source, I would not have been all wrong as I used it in a conjunction with another word (although it would have been more correct some 400 years ago, but then, I am a historian). However, and this is the more crucial part, remember that English is my third language. I would be glad to continue this discussion in Swedish or German, heck, I could probably even bluff my way through Italian. Regardless, if you got my point, that is usually the deciding factor as to if my use of language was successful or not.
Så hädanefter förmodar jag att vi kan tala Svenska, så att jag gott kan skratta åt de fel du gör :)
As to if the study was a waste of money... I disagree. When it is seen as normal that homosexuals can adopt, I will agree with you. But until then, I find this study very much valid.
Wherever my blade takes me or to school, it sorta depends
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Re: So, we need more gay people to have kids...
Would you like to take this conversation into russian or latin? I could meander through both. However, if you were a native speaker I would be very wary before insulting you in said language. (Especially russian, mát is an ugly ugly thing)
"If there is a sin against life, it consists not so much in despairing as in hoping for another life and in eluding the implacable grandeur of this one." Albert Camus "Noces"
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