Aug 16, 2011ย ยท Sean, above, wrote, "free is just a placeholder for $0." I disagree, and this is the point. The term 'for' must be used with a commodity. The use of a commodity, such as 'five dollars', can be โ€ฆ

Feb 23, 2012ย ยท Yes and no. You do use "he's" for "he is" and "he has". You do use "he's got something" for "he has got something." You do not use "he's something" for "he has something." [Note that โ€ฆ

1 Sleep on is a play of words here. You didn't know Sean Parker when you saw him -- you must have been sleeping all this while (you were unaware of developments related to Sean Parker).

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Dec 27, 2014ย ยท Sean (written "Seรกn" or "Sรฉan" in Irish) is a Hibernization of the English name "John"; that is, it's a transliteration of "John" into a form which can be pronounced in Irish and written with the โ€ฆ

Possible Duplicate: โ€œMe and my wifeโ€ or โ€œmy wife and meโ€ I keep seeing that it's just courtesy to put yourself last in a list of nouns. eg. "They went to the game with S.

18 Sean is an Irish name, and so follows a completely different set of rules. Siobhan is another Irish name with a very non-English pronunciation.

The main difference between lying and not using a comma in "Thanks, John", in your analogy, is that lying is a deliberate act of deception that often has negative consequences for the person being lied โ€ฆ

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