On Tue, Apr 04, 2017 at 02:58:33PM -0400, David Storrs wrote:
>
> One more for you: losing vs loosing. Lose means both (the opposite
> of win) and (the opposite of find). Loose means (the opposite of
> tight) and more rarely (to untie) or (to set free).
Loose and lose are actually pronounced
On Tue, Apr 4, 2017 at 1:46 PM, Leandro Facchinetti wrote:
> Hi Dave,
>
> First, thank you for your time reading the article and giving feedback
> about it. I acknowledged your contribution on the article, if there’s
> any URL associated with your name that you’d like me to link, please let
> me k
Hi Dave,
First, thank you for your time reading the article and giving feedback
about it. I acknowledged your contribution on the article, if there’s
any URL associated with your name that you’d like me to link, please let
me know. Or, if there’s any reason why you *don’t* want to be
acknowledged,
Hi Leandro,
The article is well written in the sense that I had no trouble
following along and the concepts all made sense, but I think it needs
some clarification on the meta level.
Although I understood the text of the article I found myself confused
about its ultimate point. It started off by
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