W/ is a common abbreviation for “with;” W/o is a common one for “without.” & is the ampersand and means “and.”
The divine has no problem being the fool. Someone wise once asked if God can microwave a burrito so hot even He can’t eat it. In that same light, I once seen John Cena lose to a little girl in arm wrestling. “Divine” is not “anti-slime,” but rather “slime” is half of divine.
Also, my original poem was meant to show alternative forms of limitations you could use to evoke creativity, to include consonance/alliteration. I really stand by the notion that a strategic typo does something wonky with human psychology; comparing two equivalent level of skill jokes, with one being a double-meaning typo, that is the one that will have a full order of magnitude more views, for whatever sociological reason.
And you are going to be photographed/filmed, have no doubt.
I don’t know what Illidan is, but I liked games when I was younger (a cult reprogrammed my dopamine through oil changes n cheese cloths; operant and classical conditioning), and if you want me to understand, send a clip of what you mean.
I know what they are I was just a little puzzled by you using them and wondered if abbreviating the words was a way to emphasize the word is spoken unstressed in that use.
Illidan is a Warcraft character
You know I watched some videoclips of him and the actual footage doesn’t quite do it the same as mine and my partners Parody version of him so I guess I’ve sort of changed the character in my head aha
We noticed how Illidan’s dialogue became slower and more dramatic, our version is sort of a charicature with an even more dramatic voice and we tend to shout out the stressed syllables in some words.
So I imagine I guess a parody version of that character as an aid to help me pick up on stressed and unstressed syllables and the way certain words and syllables can be stressed differently depending how they are placed in the sentence and how it is spoken.
It’s to shorten length.
W/ is a common abbreviation for “with;” W/o is a common one for “without.” & is the ampersand and means “and.”
The divine has no problem being the fool. Someone wise once asked if God can microwave a burrito so hot even He can’t eat it. In that same light, I once seen John Cena lose to a little girl in arm wrestling. “Divine” is not “anti-slime,” but rather “slime” is half of divine.
Also, my original poem was meant to show alternative forms of limitations you could use to evoke creativity, to include consonance/alliteration. I really stand by the notion that a strategic typo does something wonky with human psychology; comparing two equivalent level of skill jokes, with one being a double-meaning typo, that is the one that will have a full order of magnitude more views, for whatever sociological reason.
And you are going to be photographed/filmed, have no doubt.
I don’t know what Illidan is, but I liked games when I was younger (a cult reprogrammed my dopamine through oil changes n cheese cloths; operant and classical conditioning), and if you want me to understand, send a clip of what you mean.
I know what they are I was just a little puzzled by you using them and wondered if abbreviating the words was a way to emphasize the word is spoken unstressed in that use.
Illidan is a Warcraft character
You know I watched some videoclips of him and the actual footage doesn’t quite do it the same as mine and my partners Parody version of him so I guess I’ve sort of changed the character in my head aha
We noticed how Illidan’s dialogue became slower and more dramatic, our version is sort of a charicature with an even more dramatic voice and we tend to shout out the stressed syllables in some words.
So I imagine I guess a parody version of that character as an aid to help me pick up on stressed and unstressed syllables and the way certain words and syllables can be stressed differently depending how they are placed in the sentence and how it is spoken.
“YOU are NOT prePARED!”