• @febra
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    551 year ago

    Anon has a normal friendly interaction with the opposite gender: WIFE MATERIAL

    • @endhits
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      181 year ago

      Not as bad as me, I’ll see a woman smile and will imagine my life with her.

      Fuck I’m lonely lmao

  • @Limeey
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    English
    -31 year ago

    “About to correct her”

    Good lord. I know people who named their cat “Kitten” and their dog “Puppy” - is he gonna “correct” them, too?

    He found a wife but she found a douche.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      42
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      I took it as she mixed up the words cuz her language skills

      Edit: he thought she did, I mean

      • @wieson
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        -141 year ago

        Have you ever learnt another language? Cause that’s not how that works.

        • @TIMMAY
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          111 year ago

          have you ever learnt grammar or not to make wild assumptions that generalize something as varied or complex as human language? cuz that’s not how it works

          • @wieson
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            -61 year ago

            Ok. For the girl being a russian (or at least Slavic) speaker and learning English, I can’t for the life of me imagine how she could have mixed up cat and dog. Which she didn’t, she knew the difference. But oop shortly thought about correcting her. And comment op said, it was plausible.

            I see no way how that would be plausible. Girl is speaking in a broken way, but she is speaking, not having loose vocab here and there. Cat and dog are one of the first words to learn typically. I don’t know why, it just seems that way.

            Also cat in russian is koshka, making it very easy to remember (same starting sound and they just feel similar).

            So really, I see no way how someone who is already speaking a language (brokenly) would honestly mix up cat and dog. Mixing up refrigerator and laundromat - fine, I’ll believe it, but not those two.

            • @TechLich
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              101 year ago

              I think the idea is that he thought she was confused by what he had said.

              “What are they called?” meaning “what are the words for them?” Not “what are their names?” Like he was quizzing her on her English or something.

              He was a about to correct her like “no no, I meant what are their names?”

              • @wieson
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                -21 year ago

                Ok, I see our misunderstanding. But I think if he wanted to correct her in the way you think, he would have had that thought three lines earlier.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      English
      181 year ago

      I forget the breed, but my aunt named their giant fluffy dog Kitty and 8 year old me was all about that.