Message from @cobrakai

Discord ID: 455504309917057044


2018-06-10 22:47:00 UTC  

The high school one was theory of knowledge

2018-06-10 22:47:21 UTC  

I went to a broke poor school.

2018-06-10 22:47:39 UTC  

Damnit

2018-06-10 22:47:41 UTC  

I was an international bachelorette

2018-06-10 22:48:02 UTC  

My history exam was graded in germany

2018-06-10 22:48:14 UTC  

Spanish was graded in Madrid

2018-06-10 22:48:26 UTC  

Too rich for my blood.

2018-06-10 22:48:29 UTC  

English was graded in new York

2018-06-10 22:48:34 UTC  

It was free

2018-06-10 22:48:51 UTC  

But I presume it was in a high-income region.

2018-06-10 22:48:52 UTC  

Just an education path option

2018-06-10 22:48:59 UTC  

Nope

2018-06-10 22:48:59 UTC  

why was english graded in america instead of england?

2018-06-10 22:49:16 UTC  

England is gay

2018-06-10 22:49:20 UTC  

Our tests were graded all over

2018-06-10 22:49:39 UTC  

England cannot even decide if they want their punctuation inside or outside of quotation marks.

2018-06-10 22:49:42 UTC  

Even same school werent graded in same place

2018-06-10 22:49:47 UTC  

I don't trust them to grade my English shit.

2018-06-10 22:51:16 UTC  

It depends on whether the punctuation is a part of the original quote or not

2018-06-10 22:51:23 UTC  

^this is what i learned

2018-06-10 22:51:30 UTC  

And if you are american or British

2018-06-10 22:51:48 UTC  

They just can't decide in England. Either is accepted, unless explicitly within the original quote.

2018-06-10 22:52:13 UTC  

when i learned english i was told it was a definite thing

2018-06-10 22:52:19 UTC  

It is in America.

2018-06-10 22:53:04 UTC  

In the next examples, the terminal punctuation is part of the quotation, so it stays inside the final quotation mark:
Reynold asked, “Can we have ice cream for dinner?”
Mom snapped and shouted, “No, we cannot have ice cream for dinner!”
On the other hand, in these examples, the terminal punctuation is not part of the quotation―it applies to the whole sentence―so it goes outside the final quotation mark:
Do you actually like “Gangnam Style”?
I can’t believe you lied to me about the ending of “The Sixth Sense”!

2018-06-10 22:54:40 UTC  

Last example, in England it could be accepted as "The Sixth Sense!" or "The Sixth Sense"!

2018-06-10 22:55:00 UTC  

Actually probably not as it's a title.

2018-06-10 22:55:03 UTC  

But you get my point.

2018-06-10 22:55:04 UTC  

No because its the name

2018-06-10 22:55:50 UTC  

Is there a grammar nazi role?

2018-06-10 22:55:51 UTC  

But yes, thank you for repeating my previous assertion that reiterated your assertion that it depends on the original quotation. I think three times is enough for it to sink in for everyone else.

2018-06-10 22:56:14 UTC  

Probably not

2018-06-10 22:56:19 UTC  

🤣

2018-06-10 22:56:39 UTC  

It's not a big issue here anyways

2018-06-10 22:57:00 UTC  

Pride Day= Good meme

2018-06-10 22:57:23 UTC  

english is such a bastardized language these days that when it comes to day to day use grammar barely matters as long as it is understandable

2018-06-10 22:58:14 UTC  

Oosh just saw a 4 year old overweight

2018-06-10 22:58:26 UTC  

At least she was on walk

2018-06-10 22:58:38 UTC  

thats caused by formula

2018-06-10 22:58:58 UTC  

if you dont give the child natural human milk weird shit happens

2018-06-10 22:59:13 UTC  

mommy milkers out drink up boy