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on 15-12-2018 04:32 PM
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on 15-12-2018 06:20 PM
I've always been amused by near miss
If your nearly miss something,don't you hit it?
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15-12-2018 06:24 PM - edited 15-12-2018 06:24 PM
@Anonymous wrote:I've always been amused by near miss
If your nearly miss something,don't you hit it?
Could just be a young lass, standing very close.
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on 15-12-2018 06:34 PM
You made me almost spit my chicken roastie at the computer
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on 15-12-2018 06:44 PM
I'm going to revert to type here.
A near miss means it nearly hit, but didn't. Thus a near (hit but a) miss. Normal English elidation of words/phrases.
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on 15-12-2018 06:56 PM
It still (mostly) makes sense as a two-word phrase, but can be one of those things that sounds wrong.
If you compare 'near miss' to 'nearly missed', you can see a very clear distinction and difference in meaning.
Also, consider the phrase "near bear'
A bear is near, indeed it is very near. The bear is so near it's almost touching, but this is a not a touching bear, it's just a near bear.
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on 15-12-2018 08:38 PM
@lyndal1838 wrote:By the rule of double negatives a fake counterfeit item is a real item.
Not necessarily, it could be an attempt to pass something off as a real counterfeit when it's a fake attempt at a valuable collectable (or cfollectible) counterfeit.
Without, of course, falling into infinite recursion.![]()
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on 15-12-2018 08:41 PM
As in a Miss America contestant and Donald Trump.
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on 16-12-2018 11:44 AM
@2223-au wrote:LOL...its not about the item i received.
Its more about eBay supporting these fraudulent peasant sellers!
Also eBay telling me to post back even though they know its a fake!
I always wonder at the word peasant being used. I'd imagine a lot of these shonky sellers would be quite rich, especially when you consider just how many sales they get. Even at $1 profit on each item, in a year it'd add up to quite a lot.
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on 16-12-2018 05:35 PM
@brerrabbit585 wrote:
@2223-au wrote:LOL...its not about the item i received.
Its more about eBay supporting these fraudulent peasant sellers!
Also eBay telling me to post back even though they know its a fake!
I always wonder at the word peasant being used. I'd imagine a lot of these shonky sellers would be quite rich, especially when you consider just how many sales they get. Even at $1 profit on each item, in a year it'd add up to quite a lot.
You're not allowed to be racist any more, so I guess another ism has to substitute.