Fox you need to brush up on your english.
How about this sentence?
" I do not believe in murder even without it being illegal to murder."
What do you think I am saying? That Murder is not illegal?
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Fox you need to brush up on your english.
How about this sentence?
" I do not believe in murder even without it being illegal to murder."
What do you think I am saying? That Murder is not illegal?
A double negative would be two negatives directly following each other in the sentence.
"Murder isn't not something I believe in, even though it is illegal." Both negatives directly follow each other in the first half of the sentence and the comma signals a change in though between the first half and the second half.
There is no need of a comma in the original two sentences, and the punctuation is correct.
There has been no change in thought from the first half and the second half of the sentence.
The sentence above is a double negative and contains two different and contradictory thoughts.
Now if you cared to share a few cups of that there corn squeeze, we could sit down and work on our english together.:joker: ( comma used because the though has changed between the first half and the second half of the sentence. )
After a few we may have to work quite hard for it to be english. ;)
WOW!! This forum is awesome. Not only does it have great information,but,we can get free grammar lessons,to boot. :rolleye:
Lol, who decides if its damaged or not.
Is blowing a football size hole in it's back damaged? I seemed to think so and got stopped by a CO and he gave me the gears about not utilizing the pelt. He must have been in a sour mood that day, asked me if I heard of a needle and thread then after checking me out and me promising to skin it he let me off the hook.
I had about 35 pelts in the shop that I showed him to tell him that i used them. This is about 10 years ago when pelts were worth nothing, i had a cheque from fur traders for .20 cents from the previous year
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