Should I be upset? Or am I just "overreacting"?
So, I'm a little upset about some guy pointing a gun at my mom and robbing the bank.
And this dumbass on facebook tells me I'm overreacting and I need to calm down.
Right now, I am fucking pissed. It's taking me a lot of will power not to go off on him. But I know it won't succeed in anything so I won't. Plust he thinks he's smart or something and used the word apparently incorrectly.
At least tell me if YOU know what "apparently" means, because apparently he didn't
Chill out
Side Score: 6
|
You have a right
Side Score: 13
|
|
|
|
1
point
It's like the old man used to say, "The main thing is NOT to get excited." I have tried to live by that motto and the times I have succeeded in not getting excited, are the times I handled the situation best. But hey, it's hard. I have all this hot Latin blood and it has to go somewhere. Hell, it's hard right now ;) Side: Chill out
|
2
points
1
point
You most definitley have a right. I would be freaking out to. I'm not to fond of my mother either and like blayke said i would not be happy with someone pointing a gun at her. I would go off on the guy on facebook, but then again I'm extremely protective over things like that. Side: You have a right
1
point
"Apparently", occasionally used synonymously with "purportedly", in which case it means "stated but not proven"; usually means that a particular subject, when observed in passing, appears to exhibit such traits as would support an inference, exempli gratia: of a woman who wears little by way of attire it might be said that "Apparently she cares little for the cold" or, "That lady has apparently anticipated warm weather". As such, the term usually implies that the inference is false. Alternatively, it can be used without the cynical connotations, in which case it simply means "Upon first glance it seems that...". This lexicographical bulletin was brought to you by the AVTech corporation; "We invent the future". Side: You have a right
|