If you insist.
Just an observation.
If you insist.
Just an observation.
So you insist.
Yeah, it seems out of context; there has to be more to her argument. As I said earlier, I originally thought her an undergrad but I now think she is actually and educator and as such, a more complete argument is expected.
That merely observing a behavior doesn't require modification of that behavior? Why yes.
Passing judgement on someone's behavior contains an implicit suggestion that they change their behavior.
Not really. Not at all, in fact.
No, not sure, but something in her vocabulary and the way she frames her argument makes me think "course description."Are you sure about the speaker being an educator?
No, which is why we need a wider context.The university seems to use "faculty" in the same way that other universities use "school", "college", or "division", so "in the Faculty of Science" doesn't necessarily mean "on the Faculty of Science".
Already been waved off. Kerma or Nubia might be accepted, but probably going to have the line pushed to exclude them as well.
Always thought the Nubian pyramids were nicer looking, personally.
Go ahead, point out something "great" that ever came out of sub-sahara africa*. Sanitation? Engineering? Medicine? Timekeeping?
My arguement re: the OP is that No, colonials didn't steal anything, there wasn't anything worth stealing. Rhodes' opinion of a lost city is not pertinant, though the existance of the city could be.
That was all but undecipherable, sorry.Saying that someone not doing something is being hypocritical is a form of insisting that their (sic) person do the thing that you say their (sic) not doing is hypocritical. It may not be an explicit insistence but it does provide the person who made the assertion plausible deniability when they want to say that they didn't answer.
Passing judgement on someone's behavior contains an implicit suggestion that they change their behavior.
She was talking about how practitioners of black magic could send lightning to strike a person and wanted to know how science could explain that. In response the guy said "it's not true." Which of course it isn't. It's hard to tell whether the instantaneous response to his comment was an objection to this example of arrogant western science or his breaking one of the rules, or both. Probably both.
It's not an ipad, it's a bit of slate the local witchdoctor enabled wifi on.
. . . as arranging such cozy forums that will not put up with contrary views is very typical of conspiracy theorist web forums.
jaydeehess-
When you use the gerund-źwhich is a participle that functions as a noun--you can use the possessive form personal pronoun. There the phrase "their [...] <gerund>" is not grammatically incorrect and does not need me need to be marked with (sic)--especially since you used "her bringing up" in your response.
Well, the moderator did say " . . . by doing that, you're disrespecting the sacredness of this space . . . what you're trying to do is collapse this space and make it antagonizing."
In other words cozy. No word if they had their blankees.
Ok, I see that. The first "their" was meant to be a "the" though, was it not?
Even with this explanation though, the paragraph is so convoluted as to be nigh on undecipherable, imho. While I accept that you may have meant to use "their " in the second instance, when I read it I have a hard time fitting that use into the sentence. While it is still very odd, to me it looked like you wanted "they're".