Author Topic: Is the English language just easy to slack off?  (Read 1740 times)


If something interests me, I tend to get into it and write a lot to explain all I mean.

If I'm not interested in something, I don't tend to post, so most of my posts end up really long, unless I'm just making a joke.

Also, I use spaces between lines way too often. :P
Huh, I guess I do this a lot too... >_>




English is pretty weird.
extrapolate
Leet Speak
Americanisations
Do you try too post paragraphs with big words in them?
Because I'm impressed.
However, I can only process half of what you say because I have no idea what those words are.
Lol xD

Do you try too post paragraphs with big words in them?
Because I'm impressed.
However, I can only process half of what you say because I have no idea what those words are.
Lol xD
:P
To be fair, I couldn't think of any other words than those. But yeah, maybe some times I don't take the logical shorter words because I don't seem to think of them first. also longer words make you seem smarter :P

Extrapolate is to estimate based on what you know already. To stretch out data to make predictions.
So you can extrapolate the rules of English language that you already know to cover things you aren't experienced in.

Leet Speak, or 1337 speak is when people use numbers and symbols instead of letters. It's a bit of a jokey method of writing on the internet. Imagine the way in which you write words on a calculator. 58008 = BOOBS

And Americanisations are words or variations of them that are common in US English, but not UK English. Or are written or pronounced differently. Generally speaking, Americanisations are shorter/simpler than the UK counterpart. Often taking silent letters out of words.
Think Colour -> Color, or Mum -> Mom, or Aluminium -> Aluminum

the first rule of English is that there are no rules
I wish this were true when I did my English GCSEs.

I might have gotten marks for writing "asoijoivme12iojA*(iomlkm"