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He / She who Cares!

He / She who Cares!

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He / She who Cares!

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Originally posted by ChessPraxis
well done CP


Originally posted by ChessPraxis
... the internet's not written in pencil, xis.

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Originally posted by Grampy Bobby
... the internet's not written in pencil, xis.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xXBP_AAZU6c


Originally posted by ChessPraxis

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nfk7TibTgwI

^
... you wrote ^?

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Originally posted by Grampy Bobby
... you wrote ^?
Who cares! 😛

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Originally posted by ChessPraxis
Who cares! 😛
... the janitor and mrs xis and mikey.

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GB, that has been an exclamation mark(!) which has a different meaning than a question mark (?)

Oh and I do.

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Originally posted by Ponderable
GB, that has been an exclamation mark(!) which has a different meaning than a question mark (?)

Oh and I do.
Used ^?
to mean
you wrote
it?

See Sticky Game Thread... v

http://sobadsogood.com/2011/10/29/13-unique-punctuation-marks-you-never-knew-existed/

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Always a Faculty get out clause. 😉

-m.

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Originally posted by ChessPraxis
Finally, I thread I can get behind. Or would, if I cared.

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Originally posted by apathist
Finally, I thread I can get behind. Or would, if I cared.
He / She who Cares!

It is always nice to know who your dealing with. 😉

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Originally posted by mikelom

Always a Faculty get out clause. 😉

-m.
So, you insert a "get out clause" if there's a contract with a deadline

or cut-off time by which some work or service should be completed?


Postscript: Would "Get the Hell out of my business" fly?
.

2 edits
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Originally posted by Ponderable
GB, that has been an exclamation mark(!) which has a different meaning than a question mark (?)

Oh and I do.
Ponderable, my friend, a small English point:
"different" is followed by "from" or "to" but never by "than", although the "than" mis-usage is so common nowadays that the authorities will have to accept it soon as a legitimate third choice.

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Originally posted by Kewpie
Ponderable, my friend, a small English point:
"different" is followed by "from" or "to" but never by "than", although the "than" mis-usage is so common nowadays that the authorities will have to accept it soon as a legitimate third choice.
Not to mention the "mis-usage" misusage.