riccardo to [email protected] • 1 year agoRulelemmy.mlimagemessage-square8fedilinkarrow-up1238arrow-down14
arrow-up1234arrow-down1imageRulelemmy.mlriccardo to [email protected] • 1 year agomessage-square8fedilink
minus-square@taralink41•1 year agoBatman name is Batman, that is batman name. “Batman”, batman said to batself. “That’s me”. Batman liked batman name. “Who’s that?”, asked a passing child to their parent. “Batman is Batman” replied their parent.
minus-squaremanucodelinkfedilink17•edit-21 year agoBatman name is Batman, that is batman name. “Batman”, batman said to batself. “That’s batman”. Batman liked batman name. “Who’s that?”, asked a passing child to their parent. “Batman is Batman” replied their parent. Fixed it for you.
minus-squaremanucodelinkfedilink11•edit-21 year agoHe/him or she/her don’t cover demonstrative pronouns though. Therefore I would assume that Batman/batman doesn’t either.
minus-square@taralink2•edit-21 year agoAlternatively: Batman name is Batman, batman is batman name. “Batman”, batman said to batself. “Batman’s batman”. Batman liked batman name. “Who’s that?”, asked a passing child to their parent. “Batman is Batman” replied their parent.
Batman name is Batman, that is batman name. “Batman”, batman said to batself. “That’s me”. Batman liked batman name.
“Who’s that?”, asked a passing child to their parent. “Batman is Batman” replied their parent.
Batman name is Batman, that is batman name. “Batman”, batman said to batself. “That’s batman”. Batman liked batman name.
“Who’s that?”, asked a passing child to their parent. “Batman is Batman” replied their parent.
Fixed it for you.
“that” is also a pronoun.
He/him or she/her don’t cover demonstrative pronouns though. Therefore I would assume that Batman/batman doesn’t either.
Alternatively: