1st MP3 in NH said:I've benn up for 0ver 36 hours so back off. I can barely see what i am tying.
Next time you feel like giving a spelling lesson become a teacher or just shut the hell hell up.
PatrickP5 said:
It has nothing to do with that - you obviously don't know how to spell the word, as you've spelled it incorrectly every time you've used it. That's dating back months, not just the last 36 hours (which is hardly a valid excuse anyway). Typos are one thing, hell, SedanMan busted me on one in that very same post, but this is entirely something else. I'm just saying it's giving me a damn headache around here trying to decipher people's threads when they can't spell. It's not just you. You don't have to be an english teacher to be able to appreciate good communication skills.
Patrick
UBlink said:I'm afraid I have to go with Patrick. I try to put aside spelling issues but it does grate on you. Believe it or not, how you say something does communicate as much or more than what you say. And while your image in this forum may have little long term impact, it wouldn't hurt to take Patrick's advice as constructive criticism. And yes, I'm old, but so are a lot of the people who have influence over your life and mine.
Actually it would be Q-U-I-T-T-E-R. 2 T's in quitter, not 1PatrickP5 said:
"Quiter" is one who quits, that is he stops or gives up. "Quite" is pronounced "kwite" and is an intensifier: "Johnnie did quite well on his spelling test." "Quieter" means less loud. Sound it out.
Q-U-I-E-T
Patrick