Thread: Columbus Day
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John H[_2_] John H[_2_] is offline
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Aug 2008
Posts: 8,637
Default Columbus Day

On Tue, 04 Oct 2011 09:32:53 -0400, JustWait wrote:

On 10/4/2011 9:26 AM, X ` Man wrote:
On 10/4/11 9:16 AM, JustWaitAFrekinMinute! wrote:
On Oct 4, 8:57 am, X ` wrote:


Hey stalker, did you run a background check, or just follow him to his
marina and take pictures?


It's getting *more* difficult to follow your totally disconnected
thought patterns and paranoia. What are you ranting and raving about now?




The woman you stalked to her marina, took pictures of without he
knowledge, and stalked here driving her from the group.. What was her
name, MadCow?

But you sent info electronically, with the clear intent to harass. You
eluded to the information when you got it, you noted it when you told
Bonnie the Pig to check his email, and he started eluding to it that
night leading up to the criminal activity last night. Any Judge will be
able to make the connection and hit up your financial records / card
purchases to see if you are telling the truth... I will know more later
this afternoon...


First:

Elude vs. Allude vs. Illude
by Michael

The commonly misused words elude, allusion and illusion share a common root word (Latin lude to
play), but their meanings aren’t similar at all. Fortunately, recognizing the prefixes can help keep
these two words separate in your mind.

The Latin prefix e means “out,” so elude originally suggested the end of a game or a sword fight,
where a clever winner tricked his opponent by “playing out.” A fugitive can elude his pursuers by
making them look for him outside of where he really is.

The prefix a or ad often comes from the Latin ad, which means “to.” For example, an adjunct
professor is a part-time instructor who is “joined to” the faculty to teach a few classes. So an
allusion is an indirect reference “played to” something else, such as a quotation that you expect
your readers will recognize without having to be told where it came from.

The prefix in or sometimes il or im often comes from the Latin in, which means “at, in, toward,”
among other things. It gives illusion the meaning of “play with.” An illusion is something that
isn’t real – somebody is playing with your mind and trying to fool you.

Second: Any lawyer worth an ounce of salt would have advised you by now to STFU.