I'm willing to make an even trade: I'll let "irregardless" slide if we can establish a fine for adding "s" to forward, backward, upward, downward and toward.
You're welcome.
You're welcome.
I'm willing to make an even trade: I'll let "irregardless" slide if we can establish a fine for adding "s" to forward, backward, upward, downward and toward.
You're welcome.
I blame no child left behind.
It sounded cromulent to me.
I've started to appreciate the flexibility of language as I've gotten older. Helps separate us from the animals.
I'm willing to make an even trade: I'll let "irregardless" slide if we can establish a fine for adding "s" to forward, backward, upward, downward and toward.
You're welcome.
That’s exactly why it’s a word. Word have meaning because people give them meaning.any editor worth his salt would can you for using that word. Just because a word has been thrust into the dictionary because idiots use it so often incorrectly, that doesn't mean it's magically become a word.
None of that makes any sense. Sforward? Sbackward? Supward? Sdownward? Stoward? Must be a public school kid...
If it were possible, I'd give multiple ratings for this - Funny, Winner and Creative.
"Supward" sounds like a slang greeting: "S'up, word?"
That's sarcasm though.English is the only language where a double positive equals a negative.
"Yeah right."
Responsible, irresponsible - opposite
Regardless, irregardless - same
Irregardless is used, it ain't a word in formal English.
There is a whole conversation of words we used to use:Has squeat caught on yet? You know, "Let's go eat". Heard it all the time in Helser in 80's