I'd love some more responses from native #English speakers, please!
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RE: https://mastodon.social/@CyReVolt/116217855294565769
I'd love some more responses from native #English speakers, please! π₯Ί
I know that some do say "I've ran" etc, and I know it's not *too* common. Well, Fedi is not exactly representative, of course. x)
At the same time, I know a bit more about my followers now, possibly. Or at least the most "engaging" ones. Interesting.
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RE: https://mastodon.social/@CyReVolt/116217855294565769
I'd love some more responses from native #English speakers, please! π₯Ί
I know that some do say "I've ran" etc, and I know it's not *too* common. Well, Fedi is not exactly representative, of course. x)
At the same time, I know a bit more about my followers now, possibly. Or at least the most "engaging" ones. Interesting.
@CyReVolt It took me a while to understand the yes/no options! (But it's been a long week)
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RE: https://mastodon.social/@CyReVolt/116217855294565769
I'd love some more responses from native #English speakers, please! π₯Ί
I know that some do say "I've ran" etc, and I know it's not *too* common. Well, Fedi is not exactly representative, of course. x)
At the same time, I know a bit more about my followers now, possibly. Or at least the most "engaging" ones. Interesting.
The "have" is really redundant, "I Ran" implies the past tense.
Maybe "I heve been running" would be one way to express this, perhaps when discussing historical running.
I run (or more likely I'm running) is a more common expression.


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R relay@relay.infosec.exchange shared this topic