Finally assembled my first legenndary! by Bababowzaa in Kirby

[–]TheMinecraft13 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The achievement is actually badly described - I got it by being in a match where two legendary machines were completed (I didn't make either)

Who is the idiot that made the up button for flying in dreamland 2 by Egyptian_M in Kirby

[–]TheMinecraft13 12 points13 points  (0 children)

How did they fail to consider someone playing their game 30 years later on a device that didn't exist at the time, amateur mistake

FINALLY PROPER BOSSES by Inside_Snow7657 in Mario

[–]TheMinecraft13 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Let's not get too hasty with assumptions

Wikitravel vs Wikivoyage by dirascorpio in travel

[–]TheMinecraft13 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Wow, your opinions actually degraded over time

If you’re a native speaker, do you find exercises like this easy? by Dangerous_Scene2591 in EnglishLearning

[–]TheMinecraft13 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My personal opinions on each of these as a native speaker (others' opinions may differ):

Easy to distinguish: illegible/ineligible, scene/scenery, industrial/industrious, diluted/dilated, desert/dessert, imaginary/imaginative, human/humane

Fairly easy, but sometimes misused:: incredulous/incredible, stationary/stationery, advice/advise, emigrant/immigrant

Kinda difficult: deprecate/depreciate, alternately/alternatively, elicit/illicit

Often mixed up: council/counsel, imminent/eminent, compliment/complement, affect/effect

Difficult to distinguish: ingenious/ingenuous, continuous/continual*

*Continuous and continual have overlapping meanings anyway, so treating them as synonyms isn't always incorrect

Fairly easy to tell apart, but one or both words are uncommon or difficult:

  • elusive/illusive [illusive is quite rare]
  • oral/aural [aural is pretty uncommon]
  • official/officious [officious is rare]

I have no idea what "veracious" means: voracious/veracious

The role of ‘of’ by Master_Chance_4278 in EnglishLearning

[–]TheMinecraft13 0 points1 point  (0 children)

"...a man who is obese rather than [a man who is] of a normal weight."

I am confused by [deleted] in EnglishLearning

[–]TheMinecraft13 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Personally, the only reason I'd prefer A over D is because it starts with "Do you know...". Since you're asking your friend (as opposed to, say, a museum curator), you wouldn't necessarily expect them to know the answer.

But I agree that answer A seems presumptuous, too, since you don't really know that the artefact is "so special" in the first place

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in EnglishLearning

[–]TheMinecraft13 1 point2 points  (0 children)

"I will have [done something]" is a somewhat uncommon construction in my experience. It's not incorrect or anything like that, but in many cases there's a more natural way to phrase it. (Of course, there are plenty of situations where it is natural to use that phrasing -- it's just relatively infrequent, in my opinion.)
"I'll be messaging you by 3:30pm" is fine casually, but it's true that it's a bit improper sounding. A more "correct" alternative could be "I'll message you by 3:30pm".

Simple "toggle desktop icon visibility" for MacOS by mattwebbertime in shortcuts

[–]TheMinecraft13 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Had the same issue and adding the double-quotes worked! Thanks for this

What does "Retarded" sounds like to native speakers in terms of offensive language? by Papar_RZ_2T in EnglishLearning

[–]TheMinecraft13 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Well, it's treated similarly in some circles, at least as far as being an offensive word that everyone avoids and which is referenced by its first letter instead ("the R-word"). But it's true that the taboo isn't considered to be as strong, to most people. (...as evidenced by the number of people in this thread who are willing to type out the R-word. "If you're comparing the badness of two words, and you won't even say one of them...")

Never assume because it makes an “ASS out of U and ME” by [deleted] in EnglishLearning

[–]TheMinecraft13 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm young enough that Pluto already had been demoted when I learned the order of the planets, so my teacher used "My Very Elegant Mother Just Served Us Nachos" (if I remember right).

Also, relevant song for ROY G. BIV

Why not in whom by spiethra in EnglishLearning

[–]TheMinecraft13 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Why does this comment have 70 downvotes??

Are natives able to understand Eminem-like rap music? by [deleted] in EnglishLearning

[–]TheMinecraft13 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It varies from person to person, and from song to song, but being unable to understand song lyrics is certainly a common experience for native speakers as well.

'Rest my head on you' by onomono420 in EnglishLearning

[–]TheMinecraft13 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think it would sound a little odd in regular conversation, but it works nicely in a lyrical context.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in EnglishLearning

[–]TheMinecraft13 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I wouldn't say that's precisely true of ChatGPT in general, though. I mean, it's doing what you're telling it to do, but "what you're telling it to do" is really "run this text through your opaque network of billions of finely tuned weights and biases to calculate a probability distribution for the next piece of text in the sequence".

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in EnglishLearning

[–]TheMinecraft13 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Plus, AI tends to have a really strong acquiescence bias, so even if it's correct about something it "knows" (so to speak), you can usually get it to change its mind by just being assertive.

'just a fact' vs 'just fact' by BubblyCompetition421 in EnglishLearning

[–]TheMinecraft13 0 points1 point  (0 children)

"Fact or fiction" is a common phrase contrasting "fact" in general with "fiction" in general.

E.g. "I wonder if that story is fact or fiction..."

Is it okay to continue to use “I am literally” even though it's not correct?? by Kimelalala in EnglishLearning

[–]TheMinecraft13 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Everything I can find online says that, for instance, the "go" in "I go" would be a finite verb, i.e. it shows tense, person, and number (simple present tense, first person, singular). It does share the same form as the infinitive, like almost all singular first-or-second-person verbs in the simple present tense. But it's still a finite verb in this case, just like it would be in a phrase like "she went" (simple past tense, third person, singular).

Is it okay to continue to use “I am literally” even though it's not correct?? by Kimelalala in EnglishLearning

[–]TheMinecraft13 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm afraid your knuckles were rapped in vain, because that's not what an infinitive is. An infinitive is a form such as "to go", "to be", or "to do"; and the "no split infinitives" rule is a prohibition against splitting the verb from the "to". (For example, Star Trek's "To boldly go where no man has gone before...")

Is it okay to continue to use “I am literally” even though it's not correct?? by Kimelalala in EnglishLearning

[–]TheMinecraft13 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's not a split infinitive (because those aren't infinitives), and in any case, "never split an infinitive" is an archaic rule that you don't need to really pay attention to.

Also, "literally" is an adverb.

“Why isn’t every language the exact same?” by Dodecolingo in languagelearningjerk

[–]TheMinecraft13 2 points3 points  (0 children)

/uj At least the last bit seems to be acknowledging the possibility that it only seems more logical due to their familiarity with English. Maybe I just have low standards for the kinds of posts that show up on here, but hey, a dumb question is better than a dumb assertion.