Sidwalkastronomy wrote:
Hey Mr perfect
Theirs should be their's as in their is
It's funny when the grammar police get it wrong.
"Theirs"means "belonging to them".
"There's"means "there is".
jayluber wrote:
So true. but does their's make a great metal print? There's the proof??? Or should it be where's the proof? or wheir's the proof? Either way, it's not their there. Nor here...
Well if you’re gonna order your two metal prints and theirs are the ones you order and they’re gonna send hanging hardware and it’s over there and some one sees it and asks what it’s for, you might say “well it’s its and that’s thats”
Markag wrote:
Ain't rite !
Should that not be: ’Tain’t Rite ?
SuperflyTNT wrote:
Completely wrong. “Theirs” is a possessive pronoun used to replace the possessive “their” followed by a noun. In this case I used “theirs” in place of saying “their spelling”. “Their’s” is never correct. As a contraction of “their is” it’s just not possible since “their” is always followed by a noun. Now you could have “theirs is” but the contraction would be “theirs’s” and it’s not really a valid contraction.
Ah, English!
Grammar (and its various rules) is why English is apparently a “second language” to many Americans.
(And I am sure there was probably something technically incorrect about that statement as well. <GRIN>)
“Completely wrong. “Theirs” is a possessive pronoun [“belongs or belonging to”] used to replace the possessive “their” followed by a noun. In this case I used “theirs” in place of saying “their spelling”.
“Their’s” is never correct. As a contraction of “their is” it’s just not possible since “their” is always followed by a noun. Now you could have “theirs is” but the contraction would be “theirs’s” and it’s not really a valid contraction.” —SuperflyTNT
It's funny when the grammar police get it wrong.
"Theirs" means "belonging to them".
"There's" means "there is". —Moonhawk
Accurate comments. It seems sometimes do not know or understand the rules of English grammar.
I do not understand all the various technicalities either.
Is this the most fun we’re going to have on this fine Sunday morning? I hope not !
New test — rules surrounding question and quote marks. Which comes first and of course, why?
Markag wrote:
Is this the most fun we’re going to have on this fine Sunday morning? I hope not !
New test — rules surrounding question and quote marks. Which comes first and of course, why?
It depends. If you’re quoting a question it’s inside the quotation marks. If it’s question about the quote it’s outside. If it’s question about a quote that’s a question it’ll have one inside and another outside! 😜🤪
SuperflyTNT wrote:
It depends. If you’re quoting a question it’s inside the quotation marks. If it’s question about the quote it’s outside. If it’s question about a quote that’s a question it’ll have one inside and another outside! 😜🤪
Well, I won't even try to unwind that one, but I suspect you're right.
And let's not get started on "your" and "you're".
And we somehow left out "they're", the contraction of "they are".
Or my personal pet peeve: "lose", "loose", "loser", "looser". You know who you are.
Trust me, though. I screw up too.
I stand totally correct and I apologize for my mistake. Rarely do I ever have to go that deep in my retired job or life. I do stand corrected
Markag wrote:
even more fun maybe.....
A drag queen turkey?
Bad time of year to identify as a turkey....
Sidwalkastronomy wrote:
I stand totally correct and I apologize for my mistake. Rarely do I ever have to go that deep in my retired job or life. I do stand corrected
Lol. Not to worry. Clearly we're just a bunch of bored old farts.
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