Who can afford high quality steak for their wedding?
by No_Attention1 week ago
The OP used "Learnt" as a verb. Move along, nothing to see here.
by Johnstonnikki1 week ago
Everyone in England says "I've learnt"
by Anonymous1 week ago
Still does not make it a word while writing proper English.
by Johnstonnikki1 week ago
Is this who you want to be?
by Elaina051 week ago
I personally don't want to be a "who". Not sure what you are getting at.
by Johnstonnikki1 week ago
Well try looking this word up. pretentious
by Elaina051 week ago
You get what you pay for
by Training-Lab78191 week ago
"Learnt". Maybe you could learn better English skills?
by Johnstonnikki1 week ago
I mean I'm British that's what we say, what's with the hate 😂
by Anonymous1 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 Johnstonnikki1 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_Teach92431 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 Anonymous1 week ago
I'm guessing you won't reply now you've been embarrassed like this
by No_Attention 1 week ago
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