Bequeathed in fail? Can you make that make sense for me please?
"In" suggests a condition or state of being, and you could be in a state of fail (In your case, you are) to the point where you were "entrenched" but you couldn't have a condition bequeathed to you. What did you mean?
It's a pun on a Fall quote, you clueless piece of shit.
Skylar routinely uses big words he has no understanding of to make himself appear superior and knowledgable to unsuspecting So-low posters. Words he obviously never uses offline, and more obviously employs to cover up for his virtual lack of posting substance as is the case here.
Show me one instance where I've used a word I don't understand. Also, I'd be interested in knowing how you are qualified to say how I speak in real life...wait, what's that you say? You're a lobotomy patient? Oh, yeah, well
that at least makes sense.
I guess what he's trying to say is he's bequething his failure unto Kewpie. I'm sure he has enough to go around, too.
You can't even
spell the word 'bequeath'...the word you are mocking me for using, you moronic pile of waste...
despite the fact that it was already spelled out
for you,
correctly, in the post you are referencing.
And perhaps -- if we're lucky -- we'll get another of his classic e-meltdowns, replete with copious usage of the words "f*****" and "dyke", which he likes to use with reckless abandon when his facepalm-worthy posts become a little too obvious to hide
Perhaps, if we're lucky, you'll leave your parents' house one day, and get hit by a bus.
Surely, don't you mean suede Skylarker? Ha, nobody will get the reference.
You got it...
That's actually more embarrassing than I originally thought upon first notice...calling out easy pickings like Kewpie for failure and then failing miserably to use a big word in the correct context of said failure. That's good for...like, a double failure, in the same instance
a double-stuffed, ET finger-touch failure.
Darling, he is using it the correct way I think as he's quoting a line in a song verbatim.
You were saying, smithsmorrissey...?
I know what's he's quoting from; it's a line from a song by the Fall. Been listening to them for awhile,too
No...you didn't. You
didn't know it was a line from a song...or you wouldn't have gotten all hung up on your accusation of me using the word out of context. Don't backpedal now, moron.
but to be "bequethed in fail" makes absolutely no sense at all, unless you use implication. You bequeth something...you bestow it upon somebody. He's bequething his failure unto Kewpie, which I'm pretty sure wasn't his intention
though it's quite fitting.
So much for your planned excuse that your first misspelling of the word was a typo...now you've misspelled it
twice more. And, making things worse, I assume your browser has spellcheck...not that anyone could tell from your posts.
And you
truly are a dolt of unfathomable proportions...you
concede that I was referencing a Fall quote wherein I merely substituted the word 'FAIL' for 'suede,' otherwise retaining the original context of Mark E. Smith's lyric (in this case, FAIL being a modern slang noun, used with relative elasticity and sometimes as a descriptor, just as 'suede' is a noun in the song signifying what the person is -in the original writer's words- "bequeathed" and "entrenched' in) ...yet you
continue to masturbate your Down Syndrometastic assessment that I am guilty of an improper use of context regarding my statement.
And
furthermore, you mechanical monstrosity, one could
still say that even
apart from the song quote I was
still correct in my syntax, as I noticed Kewpie's glaring error of writing 'Sherlock' as 'Sharlock' and so I bestowed upon her the inherent FAIL in her writing...I granted her the FAIL she deserved, and was owed, not that it came
from me per se, as personal property would, but that it was my right to give to her that
evaluation because she is
clearly an idiot, whereas I am not...and so when she wrote what she did, her words borne of great stupidity, I took it upon myself to act accordingly and bequeath to her the FAIL she deserved to be saddled with. Bequeath
can often imply one's personal property being passed to someone else but it does not
have to be used this way; it also means any transaction where somebody gives something to someone who has it coming to them...in this case Kewpie, for her retardation, had an assessment of FAIL coming to her by someone more intelligent...which she was granted. I
bequeathed to her the assessment of FAIL.
But go on...please keep telling me how much smarter you are than I am, because it's raining outside and my vacation ends tomorrow, and I could use a good laugh.