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Old 12-22-2014, 04:26 PM   #60
el ess A
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Spartan01 View Post
Wow, well I guess that is one way to look at it.
You are pretty much wrong in every way, shape, fashion, and form, but that's cool. I am sure you did your very best.

For example,
I Never my claimed, or implied, my douchebaggery was not subject to a sliding scale, you simply made that part up.
Of course, if I am being a douche, then the other person would be entitled to get upset.
If we are trading verbal, or written barbs back and forth, then they may find themselves in a position that they may be woefully unprepared to defend. This, of course, would not be my fault.

You did admit that you didn't read the thread in question.
By your own admission you are absolutely ignorant of the facts at hand, yet still took the time to render judgment on a situation that doesn't involve you, and of which you know almost nothing.

Additionally, I in absolutely no way, called him out passively.
Passively, from the root word "passive," is defined as:
pas·sive
ˈpasiv/
adjective



adjective: passive
  1. 1.
    accepting or allowing what happens or what others do, without active response or resistance.
    "the women were portrayed as passive victims"
    synonyms:submissive, acquiescent, unresisting, unassertive, compliant, pliant, obedient, docile, tractable, malleable, pliable "passive victims"



    antonyms:active, assertive
    • Chemistry
      (of a metal) made unreactive by a thin inert surface layer of oxide.
    • (of a circuit or device) containing no source of electromotive force.
    • (of radar or a satellite) receiving or reflecting radiation from a transmitter or target rather than generating its own signal.
    • relating to or denoting heating systems that make use of incident sunlight as an energy source.
  2. 2.
    Grammar
    denoting or relating to a voice of verbs in which the subject undergoes the action of the verb (e.g., they were killed as opposed to he killed them ).
nounGrammar




noun: passive; plural noun: passives
  1. 1.
    a passive form of a verb.
I did, in fact, call him out Actively.
Actively, which I am not going to define for you here, is in fact, the antonym of passively.
I congratulate you on your attempt to use large words, and use said words to make a more complicated, and valid argument.
You did fail utterly in your attempt, but I congratulate you nonetheless.
I think you JUST made his point with this post. It was a little bit on the DB side, IMO.
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