Quote:
Originally Posted by killermickle
- LOL, three commas and a qmark in one sentance. You dont understand that google thing atall though. The guy mocked me for the spelling mistake, but had to check how to spell it himself.
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Well I was going to point out that you said "as I", which should be as me.
but you made one in that little rant too.
You said, not sure what they teaching you :/.
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Yes I admit the crude comment was a bit dumbfounded.
LOL, yes I know I use comas excessively. Moving on you have no Idea why I used I do you.
You are the idiot, did you even take the time out to research my name?
Come here son, let me teach you.
Zion
Zion (Hebrew: צִיּוֹן; Tiberian vocalization: Ṣiyyôn; transliterated Zion or Sion) is a term that most often designates the Land of Israel and its capital, Jerusalem. The word is found in texts dating back almost three millennia. It commonly referred to a specific mountain near Jerusalem (Mount Zion), on which stood a Jebusite fortress of the same name that was conquered by David and was named the City of David.
The term Zion came to designate the area of Jerusalem where the fortress stood, and later became a metonym for Solomon's Temple in Jerusalem, the city of Jerusalem and the entire Promised Land to come, in which, according to the Hebrew Bible, God dwells among his chosen people.
Zion - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rastafarian vocabulary
I replaces "me", which is much more commonly used in Jamaican English than in the more conventional forms. Me is felt to turn the person into an object whereas I emphasizes the subjectivity of an individual.
I and I is a complex term, referring to the oneness of Jah (God) and every human. Rastafari scholar E. E. Cashmore: "I and I is an expression to totalize the concept of oneness, the oneness of two persons. So God is within all of us and we're one people in fact. The bond of Ras Tafari is the bond of God, of man. But man itself needs a head and the head of man is His Imperial Majesty Haile Selassie I (always pronounced as the letter 'I,' never as the number one or 'the first') of Ethiopia." The term is often used in place of "you and I" or "we" among Rastafari, implying that both persons are united under the love of Jah. See also: mysticism.
Rastafarian vocabulary - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
I hope you understand
Irie