worse than that is "can I do the salad..." etc etc , do ?! what is wrong with have??"So...."
"Can I get.."
Whenever I hear or read those I feel like grabbing the nearest axe and doing bloody murder!
worse than that is "can I do the salad..." etc etc , do ?! what is wrong with have??"So...."
"Can I get.."
Whenever I hear or read those I feel like grabbing the nearest axe and doing bloody murder!
usually something either they have made or been "gifted"The ".....OF DREAMS!"
So many influencers keep describing random objects in this way (sofa, coats, even bleeping pasta) IT'S SO ANNOYING
I can cope with spelling mistakes but if anyone tries to make a statement and uses should of/would of/could of, it immediately negates anything interesting they may have said. Yes it's petty but I don't care.Today I saw "Wish I'd of done it"
I want to correct people on here every day for itI can cope with spelling mistakes but if anyone tries to make a statement and uses should of/would of/could of, it immediately negates anything interesting they may have said. Yes it's petty but I don't care.
That really made me laugh, that term is just Teeth Grinding, IMO most people who uses "The Cloud" has their in "The Cloud", not the best place to keep your XXX rated material as many celebrities have found out."The Cloud"
As an IT person, I find this term incredibly irritating because in essence you're just dumping your data on someone else's storage array - basically a server! Which bares about as much resemblance to a fluffy white cloud as an boiled egg sitting atop Mount Everest!
I have a colleague who calls me hun/honey etc. I know I'm being too sensitive, but I find it so patronising. The fact that she barely knows me and I'm her senior and still calls me things like that makes it extra annoying. I know some people just have their little linguistic quirks but I get so angry inside and have to smile through gritted teeth whenever she says it. I don't mind some things like that, like 'love' or something that could be down to someone's dialect, but hun and the like always sounds so insincere to me.Hun (when used with sincerity)
Next time he does this you should say "are you sure he did?" and see what he says.One my partner keeps coming out with, which he's picked up off his friend (it also equally annoyed me when the friend said it!) is to say "and he does" or "and he did" when someone makes a blatantly obvious statement about someone.
For example - His friend could say - "Coor, Reece went off at his girlfriend earlier didn't he?". Instead of just answering like a normal person would (ie: "yeah he did to be honest") my partner and his friend would say "and he did".
Infuriates me.