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By (user no longer on site) OP
over a year ago
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Ok so you have oftern heard the saying of they reckon or they say this that n tuther yeah. So I am wondering who exactly they are then. Is there a group of people that sit around in a room some were in the UK to make shit up. Maybe they meet once a week or something??
Ow and please no sereous and long winded replies please as this post is just for abit of fun yeah |
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"Ok so you have oftern heard the saying of they reckon or they say this that n tuther yeah. So I am wondering who exactly they are then. Is there a group of people that sit around in a room some were in the UK to make shit up. Maybe they meet once a week or something??
Ow and please no sereous and long winded replies please as this post is just for abit of fun yeah"
k |
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By (user no longer on site) OP
over a year ago
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"The fragils"
I would be very very impressed if any one could remember and quote the theme tune to the fragils for me on here??
No cheating by the way with google n that |
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"its not the fraggles its the muppets and the poddington peas and yes i do know the theme tune to both"
Who else here is old enough to remember the Herbs?
I loved the magic word that made the door into the garden open ... Herbidacious!
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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They and them are both pronouns, that is words which are used in place of nouns or noun groups. They and them are always used in place of plural nouns or noun groups in the third person. However the fundamental difference between the two in grammatical terms, is that they is a subject pronoun, and them is an object pronoun.
~ 1) They
'They' is used to refer to the subject of a clause. In other words, it usually represents the ‘doers’ of the action described by the verb, and usually refers back to two or more people or things that were mentioned earlier.
~ 2) Them
Them is used to refer to the object of a clause. In other words, it usually represents the group of people or things that have ‘experienced’ the action described by the verb, and refers back to two or more people or things that were mentioned earlier
~ See, now ya know. |
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By (user no longer on site) OP
over a year ago
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"They and them are both pronouns, that is words which are used in place of nouns or noun groups. They and them are always used in place of plural nouns or noun groups in the third person. However the fundamental difference between the two in grammatical terms, is that they is a subject pronoun, and them is an object pronoun.
~ 1) They
'They' is used to refer to the subject of a clause. In other words, it usually represents the ‘doers’ of the action described by the verb, and usually refers back to two or more people or things that were mentioned earlier.
~ 2) Them
Them is used to refer to the object of a clause. In other words, it usually represents the group of people or things that have ‘experienced’ the action described by the verb, and refers back to two or more people or things that were mentioned earlier
~ See, now ya know. "
AND SLEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEP! |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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dance your cares away, worries for another day.
it used to be my daughter fave cartoon, along with the muppet babbies also and sesame street.
i will be bloody humming that all day now |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"Not they......those."
tsk... 'those' is a Demonstrative Pronouns that substitute nouns when the nouns they replace can be understood from the context. They also indicate whether they are replacing singular or plural words and give the location of the object.
As we don't know who 'they' are we therefore cannot ascertain their location, and thus can't use 'those'. See. |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"and 'that' ?"
Inadmissable as it's (that means 'that', not it is) the singular of 'those' and as we still don't know who 'they' are we also cannot be sure if 'they' is actually a 'he' or a 'she' so the use of 'that' may be factually incorrect if 'they' turns out to be true. |
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