But you missed the most important part... Originally Posted by SofaKingFunWouldn't be my first time. Please enlighten me. And use small words with lotsa pics because apparently I am illiterate.
Me? WK the wife? Hahahahahahahahahahahahaha! She'd stab me in the eye if I tried. You have NO idea how independent she is...Right. I don't know anything about her. Or you, other than that you say you aren't her WK as you WK her.
Do you two share a brain, as well as a fucked up understanding of the English language?
First, Wilde, you realize that "common" has more than one definition...and that the definition you're using ISN'T the one in play here...right?
LL, please...I said "there is your idea of what common courtesy is, and everyone else's idea...rarely are they exactly the same..." Their ideas are rarely the same about a concept that doesn't exist...and, of course, that's why their ideas are rarely the same. Somewhat akin to how people's ideas about what aliens (not the border crossing ones, the space visiting ones) look like rarely match up...
Try harder fellas... Originally Posted by Wakeuр
No, we do not share a brain. And while English is not my first language, I have an exceptional understanding of it; I can't speak for LL's though.
Of course common has multiple definitions, as does courtesy. But the most, er, common definition:
1com·mon
adjective \ˈkä-mən\ .headword .ld_on_collegiate { margin:10px 0 0 0;padding:0 0 0 19px; width: 405px;} .ld_on_collegiate p {margin:0 0 10px 0;padding:0;line-height:20px; } .ld_on_collegiate p.bottom_entry {margin:0 0 3px 0;padding:0;line-height:20px;} #mwEntryData div.headword .ld_on_collegiate p em, .ld_on_collegiate p em { color: black; font-weight: normal; } #mwEntryData div.headword + div.d { margin-top: -7px; } .ld_on_collegiate .bnote { font-weight: bold; } .ld_on_collegiate .sl, .ld_on_collegiate .ssl { font-style: italic; }
: belonging to or shared by two or more people or groups
: done by many people
: occurring or appearing frequently : not rare
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/common
com·mon
/ˈkɒm



adjective 1. belonging equally to, or shared alike by, two or more or all in question: common property; common interests.
2. pertaining or belonging equally to an entire community, nation, or culture; public: a common language or history; a common water-supply system.
3. joint; united: a common defense.
4. widespread; general; ordinary: common knowledge.
5. of frequent occurrence; usual; familiar: a common event; a common mistake.
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/common
when applied to the word courtesy, would mean that it is a courtesy shared mutually. Why wouldn't that be the one in play here?