-40 Steaks at weddings usually suck, amirite?

by Anonymous 1 week ago

Who can afford high quality steak for their wedding?

by No_Attention 1 week ago

The OP used "Learnt" as a verb. Move along, nothing to see here.

by Johnstonnikki 1 week ago

Everyone in England says "I've learnt"

by Anonymous 1 week ago

Still does not make it a word while writing proper English.

by Johnstonnikki 1 week ago

Is this who you want to be?

by Elaina05 1 week ago

I personally don't want to be a "who". Not sure what you are getting at.

by Johnstonnikki 1 week ago

Well try looking this word up. pretentious

by Elaina05 1 week ago

You get what you pay for

by Training-Lab7819 1 week ago

"Learnt". Maybe you could learn better English skills?

by Johnstonnikki 1 week ago

I mean I'm British that's what we say, what's with the hate 😂

by Anonymous 1 week ago

Well, I'm an English speaker and "Learnt" is not a word in any dictionary I can find. Not projecting "hate", just stating facts.

by Johnstonnikki 1 week ago

How embarrassing for you. Learnt is perfectly acceptable and is used in most English countries besides the U.S. and Canada. It is most certainly in the dictionary and a correct past tense conjugation of the word.

by Agitated_Teach9243 1 week ago

No way. The ignorant is confidently teaching the educated. Go learn your irregular verbs, then come back and speak proper English. And I say that as a non-native.

by Anonymous 1 week ago

I'm guessing you won't reply now you've been embarrassed like this

by Anonymous 1 week ago