I was baited.
You appear to be a healthy specimen! Off you go, chop chop.
Make this a clan and I would sign up.
Wait...I mean...
Your a nerd
^Fix me
In the language known as English, we oft' put together
You and
Are, but not always. For rhetorical emphasis, fleshing out the syllables in a sentence or other reasons, you simply don't compound the two. However,
when we do put the words
You and
Are together, we do so with the help of an apostrophe.
This is what an apostrophe looks like a few pixels bigger:
'This is not what an apostrophe looks like a few pixels bigger:
`‘’The apostrophe is used after a
You, thus forming
You're
I have prescribed for you a task of daily exercise: Before and after bed, you are to write "
You're" 10 times in a notebook for a period of 2 months. Consult us again if you suffer relapses after 2 months.
Signed, I can only approved
Dr. Bjord
Fuck your mother!
I have prescribed for you a task of daily exercise: Before and after bed, you are to write "
You're" 10 times in a notebook for a period of 2 months. Consult us again if you suffer relapses after 2 months.
Signed, I can only approved
Dr. Bjord