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If he promises them any good, it is only to render them miserable; if he permits them the taste of momentary pleasure, it is only to plunge them into eternal grief. He hurries them from one disorder into another, with the hope of deriving some gratification from it; but they no sooner taste of the poisoned cup of pleasure than he makes them feel its bitterness. Impieties, injustices, wrath, impurities, avarice, ambition, are the things to which Satan solicits, without ceasing, those who return to him; and, in order to obtain those desires, what pains, what uneasiness must they not undergo. Their heart is continually agitated with fears, with suspicions, with jealousies, and despair; they feel neither peace nor repose, and after he has rendered them miserable in this life, he renders them more unhappy for eternity. What a sad state!
Gon !!UYaySxw8qD1
Quoted By:
Satan is not a noun, they are an adjective or verb. If you meet someone who thinks they are Satan, they will either kill you or leave you telling stories of their description or actions. Anyone getting any deeper than that is letting Satan live rent free in their mind.>best kill people who think they are Satan and move on with your life.
Anonymous
>>15265960 I like this, I like you, I like the way it is.
Do you find it in yourself to post more things of this nature in a trickling manner of daily or weekly threads? I believe it would improve a the overall quality and health of this board's users.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>15267913 If I find the material
Anonymous
>>15267913 >Do you find it in yourself to post ESL momento
Anonymous
>>15268035 please explain wht you mean by your cryptic language are you challenging my own ego you know im quite fragile when it comes to people saying im bad at things i bet i made some silly gramatical mistake that made me look like a redditor............................
Anonymous
>>15268104 You have committed a grave syntactic mistake, no more cleaning toilets in Europe for you
Anonymous
>>15268115 Where is the error. It seems like correct English to me.
Anonymous
>>15268119 >>15267913 >i like the way it is Missing complement in the grammatical predicate here, what is he referring to I like the way what is? I would opt for "I like IT the way it is" or replacing the verb be with "i like the way you do it".
>improve a the Typo, the subject is a definite noun.
Anonymous
>>15268115 Wouldn't that be the preferred outcome thoughever..?
>>15268162 w-whats a noun......
and yes, it was a typo but whats a noun............... is it like apple or cherry or maybe riding or flying?? or maybe red or blue or whats a nount tlel me
Anonymous
>>15268195 >is it like apple or cherry Yes
>riding or flying?? Those are verbs
Anonymous
Quoted By:
Take it easy los
Anonymous
>>15268195 >red or blue Those are adjectives sir
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>15268162 Oh I did not even notice the typo, seems like something that happens if you change the wording of a sentence and forget to delete a word.
I don't know formal English grammar very well, only my own language's. But I often see that English speakers omit duplicate words in a sentence (eg. instead of: “he said, that that man was there”, they would omit the conjunction and just say “he said, that man was there”). In this case it would be the object “it”.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>15265960 have i ever mentioned im a member of the satanic temple?
Anonymous
>>15268199 >>15268204 okay thank you, I have learned a lot today haha
noun is like apple
verb is like running
and adjectives add things to other things, so it's like blue sock or red wine okay I got it!!
Anonymous
>>15268375 What are they called in Polish
Anonymous
>>15268381 Noun is rzeczownik, it comes from the word "rzecz" which means an item.
Verb is a czasownik, which originates from word "czas" meaning time, because it's about things that happen over time.
Adjectives are called przymiotnik because they are near other words, hence "przy-" meaning nearby.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>15269477 we have latin terms for them and native terms for them
Anonymous
Namenwort (name word) Zeitwort (time word) Beiwort (by word)
Anonymous
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>15269502 Nebenwort or Umstandswort
Anonymous