<< What you fail to realize is that with this deal, unlike your pro-religous deals, there does not come with it strings attached ...
Overeducated? Well I would rather be educated then talking like...
Hehehe...
ed u cate - verb - to train by formal instruction and supervised practice
gram mar - noun - the study of the classes of words, their inflections, and their functions and relations in the sentence
then - adverb - at that time
than - conjunction - used as a function word to indicate the second member or the member taken as the point of departure in a comparison expressive of inequality; used with comparative adjectives and comparative adverbs *can also be used as a proposition - But I wouldn't.*
uneducated - adjective - the opposite of educated
Synonyms ignorant, benighted, empty-headed, illiterate, know-nothing, rude, uninstructed, unlettered, untaught, untutored
ig no rant - adjective - destitute of knowledge or education; lacking knowledge or comprehension of the thing specified; resulting from or showing lack of knowledge or intelligence
pla gia rize - verb - to steal and pass off (the ideas or words of another) as one's own : use (another's production) without crediting the source
Okay, okay.... Merriam Webster Collegiate Dictionary
What we've learned in class today boys and girls:
If you're smarter than the other guy, then he'll kiss your buttocks. :|
>>
Gee, it looks like you are the erudite one, since you were obviously brilliant enough to discover a "then/than" usage error. Amazing! Oh wait . . . let's see what grammatical errors *YOU* made!!
1) There should be quotation marks around "WWJD"
2) The elipsis has 3 periods (not 4), which are separated by spaces -- "...." is a gross error
3) When citing a book as a reference source, you must always include the editor/author, edition, date of publication, and publisher, etc. You must also include page numbers and quotation marks (or italics) when using a direct quote. Failing to do so constitutes plagiarism, which is ironic considering you, yourself, made reference to this academic misconduct.
4) There should be a comma preceding "boys and girls," since you are addressing them. This is also a sentence fragment, but I'll let that one slide.
Uh oh . . . you're not looking that intelligent after all! Maybe if thou hath doth spent more time reading thy literature and less time studying thy Bible, thou mightest be bettereth at grammareth.
Valsalva