Author Topic: What are your Triggers?  (Read 3846 times)


My Dreamcast R trigger is a little squeaky.

People who say would of, or should of, or could of.


FFS, it's could have, would have, should have.

What about would've, should've, or could've?

triggers have become something of a meme. but whatever. i'll show you like. one.

the phrase "Please more" it drives me. ..Crrazy.

People who keep ignoring you with "but, ah, eeh, what? nope, no?" when you keep trying to say something they don't want to hear/believe you would win the argument in.

People who keep ignoring you with "but, ah, eeh, what? nope, no?" when you keep trying to say something they don't want to hear/believe you would win the argument in.
This.

Also, "popular" people.

I think this topic gave me self diagnosed depression.

People who use the word "like" more than once in a sentence.

"Like that was like totally uncalled for, like, you should stop doing that"

People who use the word "like" more than once in a sentence.

"Like that was like totally uncalled for, like, you should stop doing that"

So, it's like you don't like people who use the word like more than one time per sentence.

Pistols.
Rifles.
Automatics.
Semi-automatics.
Glocks.
Clocks.
Socks.
Mops.
Shotguns.
stuffguns.
Pistons.
Tristans.

Quote from: Master Shadow Phoenix
link=topic=269852.msg7988393#msg7988393
Tristans.
[/quote

;(
Misinformation (see: anti-GMO  organizations and their BS campaigns of  telling facebook moms how GMO strawberries are from outer space ot skme stuff
« Last Edit: November 14, 2014, 01:55:35 AM by TristanLuigi »

What about would've, should've, or could've?
Those are alright, they're only contractions.

So, it's like you don't like people who use the word like more than one time per sentence.
Damn, son.

Those are alright, they're only contractions.

Sure, but when pronounced out loud the v sort of gets lost because of the d before it, so it sounds like "would of," "should of," and "could of." That's where those came from, just a misunderstanding of the contraction.


Sure, but when pronounced out loud the v sort of gets lost because of the d before it, so it sounds like "would of," "should of," and "could of." That's where those came from, just a misunderstanding of the contraction.
I know that, but don't they teach you that in 3rd grade? It's the same thing with your and you're. People just being ignorant.