imnotbob wrote:
RedRocker227 wrote:
imnotbob wrote:
Nerd alert? But you spelled "memorizing" wrongBut I'm English you see
I don't quite get what you mean
There's British English and American English. One of the differences between the two is that American English usually replaces the letter S for Z in some cases such as for memorising/memorizing.
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cheddargirl wrote:
imnotbob wrote:
RedRocker227 wrote:
But I'm English you seeI don't quite get what you mean
There's British English and American English. One of the differences between the two is that American English usually replaces the letter S for Z in some cases such as for memorising/memorizing.
Ah, I see.
Well I don't see why
But I see
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I also LOVE to argue.
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imnotbob wrote:
cheddargirl wrote:
imnotbob wrote:
I don't quite get what you meanThere's British English and American English. One of the differences between the two is that American English usually replaces the letter S for Z in some cases such as for memorising/memorizing.
Ah, I see.
Well I don't see why
But I see
Who knows why silly Americans had to change the mother language with their silly dialect?
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imnotbob wrote:
cheddargirl wrote:
imnotbob wrote:
I don't quite get what you mean
There's British English and American English. One of the differences between the two is that American English usually replaces the letter S for Z in some cases such as for memorising/memorizing.
Ah, I see.
Well I don't see why
But I see
When Americans got their independence from the British, they wanted to remove some parts of British influence. One of those things was with the language and some Americans wanted to rewrite some of the words to look more like what they sound (which is why some words are spelled differently in American English and British English).
-> And we're going off topic again. Back to hobbies.
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cheddargirl wrote:
imnotbob wrote:
cheddargirl wrote:
There's British English and American English. One of the differences between the two is that American English usually replaces the letter S for Z in some cases such as for memorising/memorizing.Ah, I see.
Well I don't see why
But I seeWhen Americans got their independence from the British, they wanted to remove some parts of British influence. One of those things was with the language and some Americans wanted to rewrite some of the words to look more like what they sound (which is why some words are spelled differently in American English and British English).
-> And we're going off topic again. Back to hobbies.
Ah
-> OK
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My hobbies include:
....
I'll have to think a bit more.
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Writing music
Geocaching
Programming
Chess
And more!
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Soccer
Scratch
Guitar
Violin
Keyboard
Computer
Photography
Bodyboarding
Kart racing
and stuff
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Mine is like yours, chain armour is also used for decoration depending on the material.
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my hobby? sarcasm.
And programming tutorials.
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SpaceManMike wrote:
my hobby? sarcasm.
Sarcasm is a behavioral characteristic, not a hobby.
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I made a duct tape hat today.
Not that it fit right or was half-decent but I made it.
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cheddargirl wrote:
SpaceManMike wrote:
my hobby? sarcasm.
Sarcasm is a behavioral characteristic, not a hobby.
So does arguing count?
Last edited by PlutoIsHades (2012-01-21 20:43:16)
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PlutoIsHades wrote:
cheddargirl wrote:
SpaceManMike wrote:
my hobby? sarcasm.
Sarcasm is a behavioral characteristic, not a hobby.
So does arguing count?
Debate yes, arguing no.
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cheddargirl wrote:
PlutoIsHades wrote:
cheddargirl wrote:
Sarcasm is a behavioral characteristic, not a hobby.
So does arguing count?
Debate yes, arguing no.
But I like to argue over almost anything.
Including this.
Last edited by PlutoIsHades (2012-01-21 20:47:09)
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PlutoIsHades wrote:
cheddargirl wrote:
PlutoIsHades wrote:
So does arguing count?Debate yes, arguing no.
But I like to argue over almost anything.
Including this.
For the most part, a hobby is intended to be an activity that is constructive.
Debate is usually constructive, argument usually isn't.
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geocaching
philosophizing
looking around from where im standing for potential sniper posts
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cheddargirl wrote:
PlutoIsHades wrote:
cheddargirl wrote:
Debate yes, arguing no.
But I like to argue over almost anything.
Including this.For the most part, a hobby is intended to be an activity that is constructive.
Debate is usually constructive, argument usually isn't.
But what about smashing things, or hacking?
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I enjoy programming, drawing, and playing TF2. :3
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veggieman001 wrote:
cheddargirl wrote:
PlutoIsHades wrote:
But I like to argue over almost anything.
Including this.For the most part, a hobby is intended to be an activity that is constructive.
Debate is usually constructive, argument usually isn't.But what about smashing things, or hacking?
Somethings just kind of go into a grey line since there are constructive and destructive ways of approaching it.
Take the hacker example, there's a case of a hacker hobbyist who might use hacking to modify their computer. And some people break/smash things on purpose just to explore an objects anatomy and design, building up on practical knowledge (which is what I used to do sometimes with broken electronics).
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