like there are a lot of interactions in life where i cannot believe i wasnt allowed to just punch the other person and this is definitely really high on that list
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Prikaži ovu nitHvala. Twitter će to iskoristiti za poboljšanje vaše vremenske crte. PoništiPoništi
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i'll never forget being 14-15 and my English teacher going off topic to teach us about filler words and how they're a normal part of speech, and that they're for taking a pause to think mid sentence while letting the other person know you're still talking. (ty miss hazelden!)
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older people also don't seem to understand what 'like' means used in certain contexts. "bob was like" means something significantly different to "bob said", but for some reason people my parents age and older see "was like" as a stupid teenager way to say "said"
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so many male teachers did this. most notably when i was 14, drama teach laughed at the girls for our 'one leg bent stance' and mockingly imitated it. looking back, he was such a tiny little man. why did i not simply stomp on himpic.twitter.com/UAfik5OkRT
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Your "one leg bent stance" is called contrapposto and it is how many of the world's greatest artists from Ancient Greece through the Renaissance to the present chose to depict their revered subjects. That guy was the worst.
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My h.s. gov teacher (12th grade) had this as a rule. One girl couldn't stop herself one day and they went back and forth a few times with her trying to answer and him asking her to de-like-ify her response. She left the classroom crying. It was her birthday.
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I had a really similar experience in 9th grade physics class, but overly apologizing for things. It got to the point where the teacher started giving the class extra word problems on the homework if I apologized for anything. Definitely made for making friends extra hellish. :/
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Whenever "like" comes up, I think it's important to distinguish the different ways to use the word. "I'm like, that's not going to work" is a completely different "like" from the one in ""I, like, went to the, like, candy store" and the one in "It's like, do I really enjoy this?"
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Not to mention the "-like" that got shortened to the -ly suffix in most of English, but is still sometimes used by old British men. "She was talking sassy-like."
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and now you feel guilt when you catch yourself doing it and feel even angrier that you feel guilt
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