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2010-05-27
, 00:43
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Joined on
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#42
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2010-05-27
, 00:45
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Posts: 5,795 |
Thanked: 3,151 times |
Joined on Feb 2007
@ Agoura Hills Calif
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#43
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2010-05-27
, 00:47
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Posts: 5,795 |
Thanked: 3,151 times |
Joined on Feb 2007
@ Agoura Hills Calif
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#44
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As far as I know, "its" is the only world in the English language where you don't use an apostrophe for the possessive. I always spell it with an apostrophe to protest.
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2010-05-27
, 00:51
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Posts: 431 |
Thanked: 239 times |
Joined on Apr 2010
@ London
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#45
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If not Russian, I'd second guess Estonian. But your clue leads me away from German, which I honestly thought you might have said at first.
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2010-05-27
, 00:54
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Posts: 431 |
Thanked: 239 times |
Joined on Apr 2010
@ London
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#46
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Absolutely wrong. It doesn't matter what letter N900 starts with; what matters is how N900 is pronounced. Since the pronunciation starts with a vowel sound, "an N900" is correct, I think even in England!
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2010-05-27
, 01:05
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#47
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2010-05-27
, 01:14
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Posts: 431 |
Thanked: 239 times |
Joined on Apr 2010
@ London
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#48
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I knew from your sentence structure in the few instances where it may have betrayed you that it was eastern European. Cool to know.
Regardless, glad your footer is correct now.
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2010-05-27
, 01:21
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Thanked: 437 times |
Joined on Nov 2009
@ Oklahoma
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#49
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2010-05-27
, 01:58
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Posts: 610 |
Thanked: 391 times |
Joined on Feb 2006
@ DC, USA
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#50
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So "an N900" is correct.