Quote (hoipolloi @ 10 Apr 2017 00:54)
do you really think "Anyone with a slight above average iq should..."
and
It was implied that you lack the brain power to do simple and even subconscious task"
is correct English? lol. the adverb is modifying adjectives. the word is slightly, not slight. you fucking peasant.
the phrase you want is exempli gratia (e.g.) because "in other words" (as you claim it to mean.. which actually isn't what it means, but even its actual meaning wouldn't apply) isn't acceptable in this context without altered meaning. "breathing or losing at checkers against a fish" is not synonymous with "simple or even subconscious task" (sic). for one something for which one uses no cognitive function cannot be "simple" in the colloquial sense of the word in relation to "easy," and two, (I had to switch the order of your adjectives because you write like a fucking idiot. if you're going to say "SIMPLE AND SUBCONSCIOUS" and then list an example of each, you don't start with subconscious when you didn't initially. jesus Christ.) LOSING at checkers to a goldfish wouldn't make it a simple task. CHECKERS AGAINST A GOLDFISH is the simple task. once it becomes a loss, it is necessarily not simple. you confuse an activity with the result of an activity. I am 100% done with you. cannot believe you cited a degree and you don't even know what adverbs do lmfao. intellectually destroyed. pce.
