Ever wanted to own...
You are bidding to purchase the Brooklyn Bridge which is located over the East River between Manhattan and Brooklyn.
The winning bidder will become the full owner of this historic bridge as far as I am concerned.
NOTE: Upon winning the auction you will not technically own the bridge as I have no authority to transfer those rights at this time. When the City of New York transfers ownership and authority over the historic Brooklyn Bridge to me I GUARANTEE I will immediately transfer those rights to you. Until the date of transference of ownership, the deed to the bridge will remain the property of the City of New York.
However, as acting owner you do have certain privileges. You will immediately be granted the the right to walk on the bridge all you want. You may tell people on the bridge that you are the boss. And you may drive over the historic Brooklyn Bridge as many times as you want without paying a toll.
Winner will receive a handwritten certificate from me declaring your future ownership as proof of purchase. This document will feature both drawings and words. Happy bidding!
lol!!
Thank you for quoting what we've already read...AceCombat wrote:You are bidding to purchase the Brooklyn Bridge which is located over the East River between Manhattan and Brooklyn.
The winning bidder will become the full owner of this historic bridge as far as I am concerned.
NOTE: Upon winning the auction you will not technically own the bridge as I have no authority to transfer those rights at this time. When the City of New York transfers ownership and authority over the historic Brooklyn Bridge to me I GUARANTEE I will immediately transfer those rights to you. Until the date of transference of ownership, the deed to the bridge will remain the property of the City of New York.
However, as acting owner you do have certain privileges. You will immediately be granted the the right to walk on the bridge all you want. You may tell people on the bridge that you are the boss. And you may drive over the historic Brooklyn Bridge as many times as you want without paying a toll.
Winner will receive a handwritten certificate from me declaring your future ownership as proof of purchase. This document will feature both drawings and words. Happy bidding!
lol!!
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Good Lord - accusing them of getting it RIGHT isn't high on the list of "the smartest things Jeff250 has ever done" now is it?Jeff250 wrote:Slightly off-topic, but when I attempted to read the seller's feedback, I noticed this:Does that sort of grammar irk anyone else coming from a giant corporation? Or is that to be expected.This member, tmr606, has decided to make their feedback comments private.
Their use of "their" is entirely correct. "Their" is the possessive form, and not the geographic location of "there" - which would be incorrect.
What on earth did you go to school for man? To eat your lunch and chase girls by the look of it.
edit: it might be more correct to say "his" or "her", but that would mean adding a sex checkbox in the signup, and then a small piece of code to correctly display the right word for their (not "there"!) sex. In the absence of this, "their" is completely acceptable.
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Mobius, looks like you've narrowly saved yourself with the "edit."
The word "their" is a plural pronoun. The antecedent is singular-- "member." The pronoun and antecedent don't agree. If the gender is unknown, the proper usage would be "his or her" (together like that) or the gender default (although politically incorrect) "his." This is the way that I've always been instructed anyways, and I would lose credit on any paper that I wrote otherwise.
If you thought that this laxer sort of grammar was appropriate for the situation, then you should have responded to my question, "Or is that to be expected," which surprisingly you failed to do.
The word "their" is a plural pronoun. The antecedent is singular-- "member." The pronoun and antecedent don't agree. If the gender is unknown, the proper usage would be "his or her" (together like that) or the gender default (although politically incorrect) "his." This is the way that I've always been instructed anyways, and I would lose credit on any paper that I wrote otherwise.
If you thought that this laxer sort of grammar was appropriate for the situation, then you should have responded to my question, "Or is that to be expected," which surprisingly you failed to do.