Great_Expectations
Well-Known Member
I believe the protest tonight is in the form of supporting the team.
Looks that way! Just think of all the checkatrade babies in a years time, bagsy calling my kid BeavonYour parents celebrated the FA cup win with a shag?
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I believe the protest tonight is in the form of supporting the team.
I am going up the Ricoh tonight.
I personally could not care less about Skittles Cup, and if you were a real Coventry fan I would like to think you would agree.
I have had more fun watching Coventry lose; with protesting, than I have in years.
If there is a planned protest can you please reply with details on here.
p.s I do not mean the planned ones where Jimmy Hill gets a scarf and a 5 year old has wrote "Sisu Out" in dreadful handwriting, on a stained bed sheet. I do not mean the ones where there are around 20 people who look like they have never kicked a ball in their lives, getting there at 5 and drinking free coffee and tea from the casino instead of alcohol.
Thanks,
Grammar is not my main concern.Try asking in English i.e Are there any planned protests tonight.
Grammar is not my main concern.
My beloved club I would take a bullet for is my primary concern.
However, since we are on the subject of grammar.
"Try asking in English i.e Are there any planned protests tonight."
There is no need to capitalise the word after "i.e" (e.g) because it's an acronym; it's short for exempli gratia, basically Latin for "for example".
Grammar is not my main concern.
My beloved club I would take a bullet for is my primary concern.
However, since we are on the subject of grammar.
"Try asking in English i.e Are there any planned protests tonight."
There is no need to capitalise the word after "i.e" (e.g) because it's an acronym; it's short for exempli gratia, basically Latin for "for example".
I have taken this on board.Or you could ask "Are any protests planned for tonight"? Which seems more eloquent.
# Grammar Police agent #387
A protest is a mere drop in the ocean relative to the destruction SISU have done.Of course you would take a bullet for them but you want to damage them with fines and aren't interested about watching them play because you don't like the competition?
Grammar is not my main concern.
My beloved club I would take a bullet for is my primary concern.
However, since we are on the subject of grammar.
"Try asking in English i.e Are there any planned protests tonight."
There is no need to capitalise the word after "i.e" (e.g) because it's an acronym; it's short for exempli gratia, basically Latin for "for example".