It is not he he he! Damnit!

So if “hehehe” means “hee hee hee,” does “hohoho” mean “hoo hoo hoo?”

But hehehe does not mean hee hee hee, it means hehehe, which is a sly chuckle.

hoo hoo hoo is wholly separate from hohoho.

Damn nits make lice.

And I’d explain further, but I wish not to be smacked by the Crankstress.

Alright. What does this mean.

xa xa xa

As I understand it, Yeah is appropriate for “Yeah, I’m gonna kick dantheman’s ass” but not appropriate for “lieu just wrote another bathroom thread! Yeah lieu!” “Yeah” means “yes” but not “hurrah.”

Thanks for the O vs. Oh distinction. I sometimes use “O” but only when I am trying to be melodramatic. Seems I should be melodramatic all the time, then.

And I would prefer that my hoo-hoo not be discussed on this message board.

O, untimely death!

Notice how I’m not answering Sterra? It’s because I have no clue.

And I wanted to add this, just before getting my ass kicked by CaaOM… when I see that Jodi has posted to a thread I’ve posted to, I get the feeling I’m gonna get yelled at.

Anyone else?

I just realized I have threatened another poster with violence.

Fuck, am I banned now?

dantheman, I meant to type that I was going to come over and do your laundry.

While we are at it, it’s judgment, not judgement, and it’s remembrance, not rememberance.

I also wrote a letter recently to MSNBC because they had an article where the words “effect” and “affect” were used mistakenly several times. It is apalling to thing the reporter and the editor both did not know the correct usage. Almost as bad is the people who use “impact” in place of effect because they are not sure if it is effect or affect.

But my pet peeve is the way TV people say “is” instead of “has”: President Bush is visited a school today. They mean to contract it to “Bush’s” but they separate it again wrongly. You can hear the two words distinctly. This drives me nuts. People whose job it is to speak for the public should know how to speak correctly.

Take out the “r laundry” part, and you got a deal.

This, then, is my reputation?

Fuck. :frowning:

See?? You all saw that. She yelled an obscenity at me. Hurled an epithet, even. Lobbed a cuss.

Cuss Lobbings! New Olympic sport.

I’m with ya, Cranky. “He he he” looks fucking retarded. Here’s my addition: What the hell is an “arguement”? Is that some kind of British spelling or something? Argument has only one “e” in my dictionary. Give me a brake!:wink:

Wrong, pronoun breath! Although his sentence construction is somewhat awkward, Cranky has correctly used the possessive pronoun “its”, rather than the contraction “it’s” (short for “it is”), as you have incorrectly suggested:
And “yeah” is not “yea.” I’d settle for “yay,” despite its not being in the dictionary, rather than "yeah."

Consider a similar sentence such as:
“George Washington, despite his not being in the dictionary, was our first President.” - This sentence uses the possessive pronoun “his”.

“George Washington, despite he is not being in the dictionary, was our first President.” - Obviously incorrect.

Moral - before you correct someone’s grammar, know what the fuck you are talking about.

"This pet peeve of mine-- the misspelling of interjections–is about to drive me MAD.

It is not “he he he.” It’s “HEE HEE HEE.”

And “yeah” is not “yea.” I’d settle for “yay,” despite its not being in the dictionary, rather than “yeah.”

Get used to it. You have the advent of electronic mail and the internet to thank.

Sterra, didn’t you read the translation? It means “Muahahahahaha!!!”

dantheman, hehehe does not mean hehehe. It might mean heh heh heh. Nothing can mean hehehe, because it is nonsense. It is halfway between heh heh heh and hee hee hee, and you can’t tell which is meant.

You don’t exist. Go away.

“hehehe does not mean hehehe,” indeed. Someone ought to revoke your poetic license. :wink:

Ah, blowero, the quote is (I thought) referring to this:

So not to Cranky’s but pulykamell’s own post. But I might be wrong.

Sorry, but no. Do I have to “get used to” 733t h4x0r garbage too, just because it’s on the Internet? Screw that.

Irregardless drives me nuts.

So does that it’s vs its thing.

Isn’t impact a noun? I hate it when people say “impactful.”