"Remember when we were kids and couldn't wait to grow up? What the hell were we thinking?"
This times a billion.
"Remember when we were kids and couldn't wait to grow up? What the hell were we thinking?"
Saying expresso instead of espresso.
I will see to it you and your entire family is taken by slavers, then I will buy your family, then trade you all for a dog and then I will shoot the dog.Can I start saying "in tents and porpoises?"
My husband says it "breh-fass". I just tell myself he learned Spanglish from his mom.I have a friend who says "brexfix" when he means "breakfast."
I usually can get over that, but I hate when I say it properly and someone corrects me.Saying expresso instead of espresso.
I would get irritated by that as well. I have been corrected on gyro, but here nearly everyone says Jai-row. I chock it up to phonetics.I usually can get over that, but I hate when I say it properly and someone corrects me.
Mallory: "You didn't learn anything, did you?""Inflammable" would probably have been a better example for fade's point.
It could work as a word. "He was unmerciless in his handing out food to starving children."I have never, ever heard "unmerciless" before.
Well exkyuuuuuse me."Inflammable" would probably have been a better example for fade's point.
I guess it sucks to be right around here.http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/expresso[DOUBLEPOST=1364997567][/DOUBLEPOST]http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/expresso
How would you know?I guess it sucks to be right around here.
With evidence.How would you know?
People are self-centred, sometimes, without realising it. I feel like this actually answers both sides of this problem: it's why they don't ask, but it's also why you notice they don't ask. My advice, if you're not willing to bring it up, is to try and remind yourself that since you, ostensibly, also want to be talking to them, just enjoy the direction the conversation takes, and forget about what direction it might have taken if they'd said different (possibly read: more polite) things.People who don't ask "how are you?" in return in an extended conversation. If they give lots of indication that they're interested and involved in the conversation, but never bother to ask how I am, that drives me up the wall. I end up questioning if they really want to be talking with me, since they don't care to know how I'm doing.
I respectfully disagree with you on this one. To me, the ability to reciprocate some manners and empathy is an excellent litmus test for another person's character. If you can't be bothered to ask how I'm doing and show even a shred of interest in me, then I can't be bothered to keep you in my life. And this is coming from someone who pretty much hates talking about himself. I don't need them to hang on my every word and quiz me, just show that they care a little. Otherwise, it makes me think people are just looking for sycophants and devotees, not friends.People are self-centred, sometimes, without realising it. I feel like this actually answers both sides of this problem: it's why they don't ask, but it's also why you notice they don't ask. My advice, if you're not willing to bring it up, is to try and remind yourself that since you, ostensibly, also want to be talking to them, just enjoy the direction the conversation takes, and forget about what direction it might have taken if they'd said different (possibly read: more polite) things.
Whoa whoa whoa there's a huge gulf between people who don't reciprocate 'how are you' and people who are wholly self-interested. Those relationships can be draining, unhealthy and worse, and I 100% support a jettison of such people until they mature a little. I didn't mean to imply that you should forgo any consideration of yourself. Just that, sometimes, people get a little self-interested and dominate the conversation with themselves/their lives.[DOUBLEPOST=1365991209][/DOUBLEPOST]I respectfully disagree with you on this one. To me, the ability to reciprocate some manners and empathy is an excellent litmus test for another person's character. If you can't be bothered to ask how I'm doing and show even a shred of interest in me, then I can't be bothered to keep you in my life. And this is coming from someone who pretty much hates talking about himself. I don't need them to hang on my every word and quiz me, just show that they care a little. Otherwise, it makes me think people are just looking for sycophants and devotees, not friends.
The one-way-street-type friendships that result from this imbalance is not fun at all, and not worth my time.
I've been like that too lately, so I've been trying to highlight the positives when most people ask, and relying on my very close friends to put up with all the anxious, negative crap I've been going throughI actually don't like when people ask how I am. The answer often puts a downer on the conversation. At least recently.
How am I supposed to do that if I'm not sure they really want to be talking to me?[DOUBLEPOST=1365991881][/DOUBLEPOST]and forget about what direction it might have taken if they'd said different (possibly read: more polite) things.
I'd rather have a friend who will accept "I don't want to talk about it" as an answer, than one who doesn't even ask the question.I actually don't like when people ask how I am. The answer often puts a downer on the conversation. At least recently.
I just lie or joke. I don't consider how are you a serious question. Unless it comes in an actual conversation.I actually don't like when people ask how I am. The answer often puts a downer on the conversation. At least recently.