I'm gonna take a fuckin' migraine.
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Amazing; the features I like the most about the things I like are also what I like about the most about them. Truly, you and I have our similarities in common.
Yoy should come join the tautology club. Just remember these three rules:
- The first rule of tautology club is the first rule of tautology club
- The second rule of tautology club is not the first rule of tautology club
- If this is your first night at tautology club, you haven't been here before
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What's with all the punctuation are you mad at me
Someone in this little thread be like:
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James while John had had had had had had had had had had had a better effect on the teacher.
I’m not having that
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Buffalonian buffalo [who] Buffalonian buffalo bully, bully Buffalonian buffalo
for me splitting the groups made the sentence make sense:
NJ people NY people bully, bully NY peopleYou & @[email protected] — thank you, very nice!
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Somewhere at Microsoft there is, presumably a Teams Team team.
I think there are like, seven of them and they don’t talk to each other.
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I’m not having that
It's much more parseable with punctuation:
James, while John had had "had", had had "had had". "Had had" had had a better effect on the teacher.
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(Buffalonian bison) (Buffalonian bison intimidate)] intimidate (Buffalonian bison).
[(Albany cattle) (Utica bison bully)] intimidate (Syracuse oxen)
[The] Albany cattle (that Utica bison bully) intimidate Syracuse oxen.
In this sentence, "cattle" are the subject, and "oxen" are the object. The verb is "intimidate". Everything else is some form of adjective modifying "cattle" or "oxen"
We can go further:
[The] Albany Cattle (that Utica Bison bully) intimidate [the] Syracuse oxen (that Poughkeepsie yak deceive).
Cattle are still the subject; Oxen are still the object.
The cattle (which are bullied by the bison) intimidate the oxen (which are deceived by the yak)
Moving on:
[The] Albany cattle (that Utica bison [that Buffalo buffalo buffalo] bully) intimidate [the] Syracuse oxen [that Poughkeepsie yak deceive].
The cattle are still intimidating the oxen. Which cattle? The cattle that are bullied by bison. Which bison? The bison that are buffaloed by buffalo.
Which oxen? The oxen that are deceived by the yak.
The buffalo buffalo the bison; the bison bully the cattle; the cattle intimidate the oxen. Which oxen? The oxen which are deceived by the yak.
Amazing breakdown. My brain struggles with it after 8 buffalos.
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James while John had had had had had had had had had had had a better effect on the teacher.
I've tried quite a few times now, and I can't parse this at all.
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I've tried quite a few times now, and I can't parse this at all.
Try my other reply
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Try my other reply
Well, that worked. Still, it seems off. If someone were actually writing or saying that, they would most likely use "said" or "wrote" for a at least a couple of those hads.