@tippitiwichet @killingfloorman
I swim, I swam, I have swum.
@mcfate @tippitiwichet @killingfloorman
Yes, the better fix here is from "I have swam" to "I swam".
@tyghebright @tippitiwichet @killingfloorman
To me, "I have swum" suggests a regular activity and "I swam" is a particular incident.
@mcfate @tippitiwichet @killingfloorman
Yes. In the case of the image, the latter is the correct usage.
If he were reminiscing about it over tea, and it's something he's done occasionally. he could say, "I have swum to get away from those people, but it's never really worked."
@mcfate @killingfloorman My bad, my old eyes often skip stuff, I did not register "have".
I get irregardless, but what's wrong with peruse?
@bluesbaby It used to mean to sit down and read carefully, and so many people used it to mean to skim through casually that that became part of the definition. So, if your boss asks you to peruse something, you have to clarify or hope you can guess what they mean by context or their attitude. It's meaningless now.
That makes sense. Thanks for explaining.
@tippitiwichet @killingfloorman word. Invaluable is another that seems terrible, though it does take less ink than extremely valuable.
@killingfloorman Left off the period after "everywhere".
; )
@killingfloorman Boosting despite the fact that "swum" gives me the heebie jeebies, "swam" totally sounds better, and it's probably a dialect thing, and dialect things are valid in my world. But if you say irregardless or peruse within my hearing range, you will get a lecture about nonsensical words or words that have been misused so often, they now mean nothing.