'Neither' would further require the use of 'nor' in place of 'or'
and would normally be used to state that two distinctly separate propositions are both untrue, whereas the inaccuracy of two versions of an identical proposition are pointed out in this instance — that the protagonist does not possess two of the possible attributes of a single object, namely a snowflake. In short sir, in the words of Chris Morris, you're wrong, and you're a grotesquely ugly freak.
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mofaha ┐( ˘_˘)┌ ʅ(́◡◝)ʃ,
Mon 26 Jan 2009, 15:55,
archived)
That doesn't prove me wrong
It just states a different case.
A bit like saying that Clodplay are better than Keene.
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Je suis un vagabond is an unfunny, up your own arse middle class knob,
Mon 26 Jan 2009, 16:01,
archived)
Of course not
it was just an excuse to talk posh and insult you.
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mofaha ┐( ˘_˘)┌ ʅ(́◡◝)ʃ,
Mon 26 Jan 2009, 16:05,
archived)
In the words of Shakespeare:
"Fuck you, motherfucker."
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Je suis un vagabond is an unfunny, up your own arse middle class knob,
Mon 26 Jan 2009, 16:08,
archived)
Shakespeare: the gansta years
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mofaha ┐( ˘_˘)┌ ʅ(́◡◝)ʃ,
Mon 26 Jan 2009, 16:11,
archived)
"Juliet. Yo, what up, bitch?"
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Je suis un vagabond is an unfunny, up your own arse middle class knob,
Mon 26 Jan 2009, 16:14,
archived)
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Bela Lugosi's Dad,
Mon 26 Jan 2009, 16:03,
archived)