12o
Member
+2|6699
I noticed some non-critical issues in the stats pages, and thought I'd mention them.

1.  The War College Ribbon is spelled with a lowercase 'ribbon'.  All other references to ribbon are spelled 'Ribbon'.  Someone may wish to change it for the sake of consistency.

2.  All references to the word 'recieved' (Such and such medal:  recieved whatever-date) are misspelled.  "Recieved" should be spelled "Received".  The ol' "i before e" bit from english class way back. 

As I said, non-critical... in fact, waaaaaaaay down on the bug list, filed under "anal-retentive neurotic".
daffytag
cheese-it!
+104|6795
1+ for being "eagle eyed" as ea put it.
12o
Member
+2|6699


Thank you very much, daffytag.  Awesome!

Last edited by 12o (2006-08-18 08:05:43)

tvmissleman
The Cereal Killer
+201|6878| United States of America

12o wrote:



Thank you very much, daffytag.  Awesome!
You Have Been Awarded: 1 Karma Point!
commissargizz
Member
+123|6683| Heaven
Are you a English teacher? Wheres the mistakes? In this?
Can someone give me Karma, I don't like being ranked "0"
12o
Member
+2|6699

commissargizz wrote:

Are you a English teacher? Wheres the mistakes? In this?
Can someone give me Karma, I don't like being ranked "0"
I am a "technical documentation specialist"....  Technical Writer and Editor to the layman.

I'm like an english teacher, except that I don't have class, and I don't beat people when they misspell or make grammatical mistakes.... unless I'm paid to do so, that is. 

And as for mistakes in yours....  I would say, "Are you a English teacher?" should be "Are you an English teacher?"  There is some speculation as to whether English is upper-case or not, but the word does represent a proper name for a language (English, Latin, Spanish, German, etc.).

"Wheres the mistakes?  In this?"  These two sentences can be combined to form one, as basically they are two phrases with little meaning apart from each other.  Also, "Wheres" should have an apostrophy between 'e' and 's' to form "Where's..."  It can also be "Where is..." in a more formal phrase.

Hope this helps. 

Last edited by 12o (2006-08-18 08:27:31)

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