Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search
10 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
You had ONE Job! (Original Post) MrScorpio Aug 2020 OP
Heh blm Aug 2020 #1
Grate! Sherman A1 Aug 2020 #2
Don't bother me none*, I unnerstud evre wurd! abqtommy Aug 2020 #3
brogle is close enuff to broccoli rabe. pansypoo53219 Aug 2020 #4
I hate brogle machI Aug 2020 #5
Yo-sem-eh-tee. Paladin Aug 2020 #6
Whaaaat? North Shore Chicago Aug 2020 #7
Strawbebbies!!! DeeNice Aug 2020 #8
I think those are Unyun Rinsg gratuitous Aug 2020 #9
I have news for you. There are no errors anywhere in those pics DFW Aug 2020 #10

DFW

(54,358 posts)
10. I have news for you. There are no errors anywhere in those pics
Wed Aug 5, 2020, 09:44 PM
Aug 2020

They are all written in prefect, fluent Republicanese

EXCERPTS FROM THE OFFICIAL DICTIONARY OF REPUBLICANESE

In Republicanese, many words that sound alike may be spelled differently at random. A few prominent examples:

In Republicanese, the following words may be spelled at random using any of the three ways given:

A.) Two, Too, To
B.) Their, They're, There
c.) Your, Yore, You're

The Republicanese version of Robin Hood therefore starts with "In days of you're...."

The only rule is that the correct use of them as in English is never permitted twice in a row.

Words with single letters that change meaning when that letter is doubled must never be used in correct English context. The classic example is “lose” vs. “loose.” In Republicanese, if you do not win an election, then you “loose” that election. Conversely, if your (Republicanese: you’re) belt is too tight, you need it more “lose” in order to be comfortable. Another example would be the Republicanese, “I met Donald Trump, and he was rudder than I imagined,” vs. “I grabbed the ruder and was able to steer the boat to shore.”

In Republicanese, as opposed to English, an apostrophe is used to form a plural. But it must be done at random, never systematically. For example, Bill and Hillary are "the Clinton's," but Bill, Chelsea and Hillary are "the Clintons." The other way around is also correct. In Republicanese, either form is correct as long as it is not spelled the same way twice in a row.

Latest Discussions»The DU Lounge»You had ONE Job!