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5 Replies
- ZanirN7S2 months agoSeasoned Ace
Spit is an irregular verb. The past form is spat, not spitted.
- moriitzV22 months agoSeasoned Newcomer
wow thank you. you solved my problem. kek
- DUNCAN19192 months agoSeasoned Ace
Not really as you don't seem to realise you should capitalise sentences.
- CommanderBarcara2 months agoSeasoned Ace
To correctly call out a CG schill
You schill for CG every day; or You have been a schill for CG every day. Sop being the company schill.
CG has spat in everyone's faces and the CG schills are out in force giving them 5 star ratings in google play despite many players dropping 1 star bombs.
- gufu212 months agoSeasoned Ace
Arrturius wrote:
So how correctly say ... you "shill" for CG everyday or you are "shilling" for CG everyday?
If this is an English grammar question, I can help with that. Both constructions are grammatical. They're just different forms of the verb shill:
- "You shill everyday" uses the simple present form.
- "You are shilling everyday" uses the present progressive form.
The difference is that the present progressive form specifies that the action is currently taking place. "You shill everyday" can mean that you generally or regularly shill. "You are shilling everyday" would mean that you're shilling now.Shill can also be a noun: "You're just a shill for CG."
(As a side note, "shill" is the correct spelling, according to the dictionary [https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/shill]. The spelling "schill" is also listed, but as a "chiefly Scottish variant," apparently [https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/schill].)
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