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"Well, if you're going to sin, you might as well be original".

What's that supposed to mean?
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REMsleep · 41-45, F
Go all in if your going to break the rules anyway.
Bewilderbeeste · 61-69, M
@REMsleep Go all in if my what? 🤔
REMsleep · 41-45, F
@Bewilderbeeste Is English your first language? "Going all in" is a very common idiom.
I do not understand your question. My auto correct changed my you're to your due to my lack of apostrophe. I need to turn it off because for me,online spaces are mostly informal and I don't often punctuate as would be required in real life. This is for fun, not grammar school.
Bewilderbeeste · 61-69, M
@REMsleep You obviously did understand, otherwise you wouldn't have mentioned your lack of apostrophe. If I were you I'd take your autocorrect back where you bought it from and ask for a refund. There is nothing remotely "fun" in uglifying the normally beautiful English language.
REMsleep · 41-45, F
@Bewilderbeeste I love languages and frequently read books on the origin and transformation of language. No language remains stagnant. Much of what we consider extremely proper language would have been considered improper use only 80 years ago. I enjoy colloquialisms and the color that "informal language use" can provide. I have respect for the proper knowledge of grammar and spelling when used in the correct spaces such as at school or work. I find grammar police people hilarious because our languages are beautiful precisely because they are always changing and have done so since the beginning.
Latin(,proper), Vulgar Latin(horrible not to be written down), Romance languages(beautiful with a "long history of proper grammar).
Bewilderbeeste · 61-69, M
@REMsleep Regardless of all that, the use of "your" instead of "you're" is extremely unsightly.