Originally posted by karoly aczelYou lost me here, matey. Maybe you should explain in simple terms. 😏
I got the best things mate 😉
But thats not the issue here.
It's basically whether you can understand what "now" means as opposed to a linear view of time.
As simple and complex as that. nothing good. No
Originally posted by karoly aczelIf you are referring to the word "now", then that means "at the present time." However, that does not mean there is no tomorrow. Tomorrow will come and it will be today and now. Tomorrow is not the same day as today. There is a future that awaits you and that is death and the grave for sure. You can deny a judgment of the soul or a hell if you wish, but time is not going to wait for you to make the right decision. So it is best that you do it "now". 😏
Now. N, O, W.
Is that simple enough for ya?
HalleluYah !!! Praise the Lord!
Originally posted by RJHindsGood . we are making progress. i may or may not add to this tomorrow.
If you are referring to the word "now", then that means "at the present time." However, that does not mean there is no tomorrow. Tomorrow will come and it will be today and now. Tomorrow is not the same day as today. There is a future that awaits you and that is death and the grave for sure. You can deny a judgment of the soul or a hell if you wish, but ...[text shortened]... right decision. So it is best that you do it "now". 😏
HalleluYah !!! Praise the Lord!
But it's only called tomorrow for the sake of convenience.
There is no actual point where one day ends and another begins, despite our biological clocks being attuned to day and night and other factors.
Take it easy, mate. (Thats what we say here ok)
Originally posted by karoly aczelOkay, mate. But I still think you are wrong. 😏
Good . we are making progress. i may or may not add to this tomorrow.
But it's only called tomorrow for the sake of convenience.
There is no actual point where one day ends and another begins, despite our biological clocks being attuned to day and night and other factors.
Take it easy, mate. (Thats what we say here ok)
Originally posted by VoidSpiritNo.no no.
ar says me matey. yar har har. arrrr.
It's a putdown to call someone 'matey', it implies inferioirety especially in the crotch region.
Very rude.
Maybe if your the skipper it's different.
Did you ever hear Cpt. Jack Sparrow say "matey"? I didn't and if I did my mind has filtered it out 😕
Originally posted by karoly aczelokay, not a big fan of that franchise, but a quick search of online scripts revealed the captain barbossa uses the term "mateys" in the last movie. but i guess he's the skipper and that makes it ok.
No.no no.
It's a putdown to call someone 'matey', it implies inferioirety especially in the crotch region.
Very rude.
Maybe if your the skipper it's different.
Did you ever hear Cpt. Jack Sparrow say "matey"? I didn't and if I did my mind has filtered it out 😕
Originally posted by VoidSpiritThats how aussies especially Queenslanders speak, everyones your 'mate'.
okay, not a big fan of that franchise, but a quick search of online scripts revealed the captain barbossa uses the term "mateys" in the last movie. but i guess he's the skipper and that makes it ok.
Originally posted by karoly aczelMatey is a British term to describe a friend. (noun)
You couldn't tell me from the locals, mate 😉
An example of matey is someone who befriends a person traveling in London and shows them around.
YourDictionary Definitions. Copyright © 2012 by LoveToKnow Corp.
mat·ey
adj. Chiefly British
Sociable; friendly.
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition copyright ©2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2009. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
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matey, Brit informal
adj
friendly or intimate; on good terms
n
friend or fellow: usually used in direct address
mateyness , matiness n
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003
Thesaurus
Adj. 1. matey - (used colloquially) having the relationship of friends or pals
chummy, pally, palsy-walsy
colloquialism - a colloquial expression; characteristic of spoken or written communication that seeks to imitate informal speech
friendly - characteristic of or befitting a friend; "friendly advice"; "a friendly neighborhood"; "the only friendly person here"; "a friendly host and hostess"