@alicemazzy both seem fully accurate, with slightly different perspective - that carries semantic weight. the guy who "negged her" is more
@alicemazzy the more i think about it, the more ambiguous it seems. imagining a third party case, "he negged her" and "he tried to neg her"
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@alicemazzy of a wrongdoer, the guy who "tried to neg her" is more of a buffoon.
End of conversation
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