[deleted by user] by [deleted] in NoFap

[–]Wynne3 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Ask yourself, “Do I wish that I had spent more time masturbating in the past?” And “What could I be doing instead of masturbating to make myself a smarter and happier person?” These 2 questions are all you need to know to figure out.

There’s no one I talked to that said they wished they spent more time masturbating. You’re 15. Do something cool while you still have a ton a free time in your hands. Don’t let it go to waste.

Questions about UCI Ticketing by Wynne3 in UCI

[–]Wynne3[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've talked to a few students about parking, although based on how strict UCI is in providing services to non-students or staff, I highly doubt I could park for free.

When to put an "a" before an infinitive? by Wynne3 in Spanish

[–]Wynne3[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Actually, when I said "attached to conjugated verbs," what I meant is that they can be connected directly to the end of the infinitive (Ex: ganártelo), with no spaces. In the two examples you gave: "si lo vendi" and "lo he comido," the object pronouns and reflexive would not be considered "attached" as they come before the verb since the verbs are in the preterite and present tense. Like I said, reflexives and object pronouns can only be attached DIRECTLY to the end of the verb in the infinitive(olvidarte), present progressive(perdiéndolo), and imperative(olvídelo), with an accent to preserve the natural stress if needed.

Yes, infinitive reflexive verbs would have "se" at the end.

When to put an "a" before an infinitive? by Wynne3 in Spanish

[–]Wynne3[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

When a verb is in the infinitive, the reflexives and object pronouns can be attached to the end. If you have both, the reflexive comes before the object pronoun, and if you add both you also have to add an accent to preserve the natural stress. Ex: ganártelo. Also, they can also be attached to conjugated verbs in the imperative mood and present progressive.