Things you wish you could say

Just because I don't know how to move a quote like others do, doesn't make me stupid. It simply means I don't know how and would like to be taught.
These might help you:
 
Anyway. Proofreading and editing does not help a person with limited literacy skills. If you don't know you made a mistake, you can't correct it.
This thread is about things we'd like to say, right or wrong.
 
Sometimes I would just like say that there are a lot of different kinds of intelligence, not everybody has all of the kinds, and I want to hear what all other people have to say.

Even if the grammar isn't there, the chicken how-to, or the will to learn chicken how-to, may be abundant.

IOW, if seeds can't read or write, I still expect most of them to hatch.

(Especially those ... cocklebur seeds that keep showing up in the scratch!)
 
This thread is about things we'd like to say, right or wrong.
The thread implies that what would have been said would offend someone. Its gonna be difficult to not talk about the very thing the thread is about

"This is what the threads about but don't talk about what the threads about"
 
Booted bantams and Belgian d’Uccles are NOT interchangeable. Booted bantams aren’t just d’Uccles without beards with wattles. D’Uccles are BELGIAN. Booted bantams are from the NETHERLANDS. D’Uccles are stockier in the neck and body, the tails are broader, the skull is shaped differently, their topline is a V shape. The APA standard of perfection has the body for a d’Uccle as the same for that of a booted bantam. The ABA standard has them properly listed as two separate breeds. The breeds are related, but not so closely as most think.
 
Booted bantams and Belgian d’Uccles are NOT interchangeable. Booted bantams aren’t just d’Uccles without beards with wattles. D’Uccles are BELGIAN. Booted bantams are from the NETHERLANDS. D’Uccles are stockier in the neck and body, the tails are broader, the skull is shaped differently, their topline is a V shape. The APA standard of perfection has the body for a d’Uccle as the same for that of a booted bantam. The ABA standard has them properly listed as two separate breeds. The breeds are related, but not so closely as most think.

:highfive:
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom