lol english
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Re: lol english
Lol, there's only two people in this thread who capitalized English.
Originally posted by darksharkEveryone sucks at this game. The second you think you're good is the second you stop trying to get better.Originally posted by apersoni had a mri the other day it was the best song i heard in years
Originally posted by Sprite-More of a joke than the time I deleted all the credits on the site.Originally posted by MinaciousGraceyeah my goldfish think im a riot they do this thing where they turn upside down and float to the top of the tank
i guess their alcohol tolerance isnt as high as mineComment
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Re: lol english
'Is' is the verb; 'gifted' is the adjective.Go talk to another English teacher. Tell them to correct it for you and to smack your English teacher in the face for being stupid.
BTW, it's a noun no matter what word you replace it with.
Only way it could be a verb is if she put in a sentence like this:
"He is gifted with an amazing talent!"
Don't forget to record that slap (even if it isn't literally).Reverse for life!


^Way better than 25thhour's link. You know you want to sign up.
The best noteskin ever: Skittles
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Re: lol english
Anything you can "have" is definitely a noun. So if someone has a _____ that ___ is a noun.
You could use the word "gift" as a verb if you liked, like "I will gift you with a new pair of socks". But the way she used it in that sentence is definitely a noun.C is for Charisma, it's why people think I'm great! I make my friends all laugh and smile and never want to hate!Comment
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Originally posted by darksharkEveryone sucks at this game. The second you think you're good is the second you stop trying to get better.Originally posted by apersoni had a mri the other day it was the best song i heard in years
Originally posted by Sprite-More of a joke than the time I deleted all the credits on the site.Originally posted by MinaciousGraceyeah my goldfish think im a riot they do this thing where they turn upside down and float to the top of the tank
i guess their alcohol tolerance isnt as high as mineComment
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Re: lol english
So we had the final, this was on it
"The sentence was "That must be an extremely valuable gift!"
The choices were verb, adverb, conjunction, interjection, and pronoun.
The underlined word was gift"
I emailed her that.
Her response:
"That's because it was a VERB. The sentence went with the one before it, which was referring to Danielle's ability to recollect information from memory. It's something she does, which means it is not a noun but in fact a verb.
Thanks,
Flanary"
Is it a verb guys?Originally posted by TheRapingDragonThe ability to lick the clit and the vagina and apply gentle pressure at the same time with one upward lick is something the small tongued of us can only dream about.Originally posted by spreadNvGot dibs on La Camp.
Oh right, Im not any good.
Got dibs on Pita.Comment
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Re: lol english
It's a noun.
gift /gɪft/ Show Spelled Pronunciation [gift] Show IPA
–noun 1. something given voluntarily without payment in return, as to show favor toward someone, honor an occasion, or make a gesture of assistance; present.
2. the act of giving.
3. something bestowed or acquired without any particular effort by the recipient or without its being earned: Those extra points he got in the game were a total gift.
4. a special ability or capacity; natural endowment; talent: the gift of saying the right thing at the right time.
(Also, "to recollect information from memory" strikes me as a vaguely inappropriate use of 'recollect.' I'd have said "To recall information from memory" More other also: 'it is not a noun but in fact a verb' should read 'it is not a noun but, in fact, a verb') Your teacher fails.Last edited by devonin; 06-9-2009, 01:31 PM.Comment
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Re: lol english
no, it's not (edit, devonin posted while I was posting, this is aimed at the bump not him)
If you want to prove her wrong, argue structurally.Since there is no intransitive form of gift and there is clearly no object for gift in that sentence, there is no possible way it could be a verb. Try to steer clear of arguing semantics because a structural argument is much more concrete in most cases.Originally posted by http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/gift–verb (used with object)Comment
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Re: lol english
It's obviously a noun. What the hell kind of teacher do you have?Comment
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Re: lol english
How am I supposed to get her to listen?
I sent her this thread earlier, she ignored it.
She never acknowledged that it was a noun last time.
I've been emailing her for hours trying to get her to admit it's not a verb.
She won't listen to what I'm saying.Originally posted by TheRapingDragonThe ability to lick the clit and the vagina and apply gentle pressure at the same time with one upward lick is something the small tongued of us can only dream about.Originally posted by spreadNvGot dibs on La Camp.
Oh right, Im not any good.
Got dibs on Pita.Comment
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Re: lol english
I'm not sure if "The way you used the word 'gift' is explicitly included in the definition of gift as a noun" is a weaker argument.
"You used it as a noun" seems stronger than "You misused it as a verb"
Some teachers are just willfully ignorant. My sister had an 8th grade teacher that taught the class that the capital of Canada was Toronto (It isn't, Ottawa is) and couldn't spell basic vocabulary, and seemed to utterly not care)Comment
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Re: lol english
"That must be an [extremely valuable] gift!"
Here, "extremely valuable" is something that describes "gift." If "gift" were indeed a verb, then we should know that to describe a verb, you normally use adverbs. For example:
"He slowly walked." Here, "slowly" is an adverb describing the verb "walked."
In this scenario, "extremely" is an adverb which describes "valuable," which is an ADJECTIVE. We can remove the adverb from this sentence to retain the general meaning:
"That must be a valuable gift!"
I think we can all agree that, here, "valuable" is an adjective. Adjectives describe nouns. Adverbs describe verbs or adjectives.
"Gift" is a noun. It should be even more obvious if we remove the descriptors altogether:
"That is a gift!"
Still a noun >.> Wouldn't make sense to say "That is a walked!" or anything like that, now would it?Last edited by MrRubix; 06-9-2009, 01:43 PM.Comment




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