He/Him/His (Transman) ♌ INTJ. (Ambivert) Hello! I am Ames, also known as Bug or Ambrose the Gutless. I am an artist, an auto-immune warrior and an ambassador to Earth. I enjoy sugar, books, space, insects (especially bees), watches, historical reenactment (Medieval, Renaissance and Rococo/Colonial Periods) and science. I'm a proper dandy and a downright fop.
I have a J-pouch/had an ileostomy so I welcome any other gutless wonders to come here for support.
I really miss my mullet but I also want to see how long my hair can get. UGH.
I love this, because there’s obviously something very clever going on to analyse patterns of language, but it’s also profoundly ignorant.
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[ID: A screenshot of a Grammarly correction, labelled “clarity: conciseness”. The original text reads “Every book, which wasn’t many…” This is crossed out with the suggestion “Everyn’t many book” and the note “Consider shortening this phrase.” /end id]
Story time: this reminds me of some kids in an English class I’m in. They were doing written work and the teacher and I were going around checking their work. They had to do like, “do/do not”, and one example was “prepare”. Something like “My father does not/doesn’t prepare dinner”. I look at this one kid’s paper and this galaxy-brained child had written “My father preparen’t dinner” and it took everything in me to not lose it laughing right there like. This child saw a pattern and ran with it and I respect that.
Reminds me of that post on how Irish(?) doesn’t have a way to use “yes” or “no” to answer a verb question, or something like that, so that if somebody asks if you murdered somebody you can’t say “yes” or “no,” you have to say “I did murder” or “I didn’t murder,” which led my brain to produce the negative verb “murdidn’t.”