Peter Cambell

422 posts

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Peter Cambell

Peter Cambell

@CaptainKirk666

Katılım Ekim 2021
240 Takip Edilen328 Takipçiler
Chess Master
Chess Master@xxChessMaster·
Magnus was crushed in just 18 moves! After a Brilliant Queen Sacrifice! 🤯🔥🎯
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Peter Cambell
Peter Cambell@CaptainKirk666·
@rubyslegs I’m an attractive submissive male. The fun we could have together Mistress. My tongue is at your service.
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Giantess Ruth Bell Crush 🇬🇧
Have a sole-ful Sunday 😍 Farm first thing this morning, then back home for some soggy garden work… though really, that’s a job for my sissies… but that’s a story for another time 👀
Giantess Ruth Bell Crush 🇬🇧 tweet media
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Cary Kelly
Cary Kelly@CaryKelly11·
A coworker wanted to know why I was fasting for two days. I told him I could feel some inflammation had crept into my body and this was my reset button. But you’ll die of hunger, he said. So I found this video to show him how my hormones will reward me and what really happens when we go more than a day without eating. Source: the.organic.human (IG)
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Jo Ransing
Jo Ransing@JoRansing80929·
It's so great to be an American! We pay less than half what you are paying and we are selling our surplus to you at inflated prices. Net zero socialist dimwits are losing elections as the people realize they have been cheated. Drill baby drill wins the day. God Bless Texas and DJT
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Ariel Ringler
Ariel Ringler@ArielRingler·
@CaptainKirk666 @alphafox Well… it can be used ‘in’ when you say ‘I’m in the Business-class section of the plane’ > When it gets more specific, referring just to a part of the airplane or train structure. "On" is the correct preposition for public transport and large vehicles you can stand or walk in,
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AlphaFox
AlphaFox@alphafox·
If you stop and think about it, it really doesn't make any sense. 😵‍💫
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Peter Cambell
Peter Cambell@CaptainKirk666·
@rystm @alphafox Okay, you can stand up in a hot air balloon and move back and forth but you’re in it. Just saying your logic doesn’t work, no need to get emotional.
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S.B.
S.B.@rystm·
@CaptainKirk666 @alphafox The only time I mentioned the word "vehicle" was when I wrote "vehicles where there could be confusion." So either: - You can't read. - You can read but you forget half of what you read. - You're dumb as f*ck and don't understand what you read. Which one is it?
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Peter Cambell
Peter Cambell@CaptainKirk666·
@rystm @alphafox A bike is a vehicle, I can’t walk back and forth, by your logic I should be in it
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S.B.
S.B.@rystm·
@CaptainKirk666 @alphafox The example I gave was about vehicles where there could be confusion. There’s no confusion with bikes. The same goes for tables: the book is obviously ON the table but that doesn’t mean you’re supposed to walk on tables.
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Chris Ziomkowski
Chris Ziomkowski@ZiomkowskiChris·
@alphafox It's actually quite simple: If you sit externally on the means of conveyance, or if it is designed in such a way that you can stand up and move around inside of it, you use 'on'. If it is designed such that you can only sit inside from point A to point B, you use 'in'.
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S.B.
S.B.@rystm·
@alphafox If you can stand up and walk back and forth = on
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Marino García
Marino García@Danyuro95·
@alphafox If you can stand there, you use "on". If you can't stand there, you use "in". Because you are "inside" that thing instead of existing "on top of" that thing. Almost all vehicles or transport are this example.
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Oh no, not work
Oh no, not work@shortyy1836·
@alphafox This is why so many people prefer math 😂 Math makes sense, it's so straightforward and objective
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Jericho Josh
Jericho Josh@JerichoJosh1·
@alphafox If you can stand up, it's "on." If you can't, it's "in." Thank you for coming to my TED Talk.
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Ariel Ringler
Ariel Ringler@ArielRingler·
@alphafox If it has AISLES you should use ON: ON a bus, ON a train, ON an airplane. If not, use IN: IN a truck. IN a car. If it’s something you sit on top of it’s always ON: ON a horse, ON a motorcycle. ON a bicycle.
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Chris Musselman
Chris Musselman@TakeRightTurn·
You use 'on' for any large vehicle which you can stand and walk around in -- use 'in' for all others.
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Fred Bell
Fred Bell@nyfcbjr·
@alphafox Helpful rules of thumb - Can you stand and walk inside without crouching? → Usually "on" (plane, bus, train). - Do you have to sit right away in a tight space? → Usually "in" (car, taxi). - Public/shared/large transport often takes "on"; private/small/personal often takes "in.
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Ati Cosmos
Ati Cosmos@Ati_Cosmos·
@alphafox Those examples have a pattern I'm noticing; Plane and boat it's "on", you have space to walk around on the plane and boat... In a car or helichopter, you are sitting and not much room to move around, "in"...
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Adiensos
Adiensos@Adiensos·
Poorly explained English explanation but funny 😂 If you can get up and walk around and do things without being confined then you're 'on' a vehicle. If you're sitting down, unable to move around and are mostly confined to a specific part then you're 'in' a vehicle. It's not perfect but it's the best way to describe it. Should help someone who's learning English until they figure out the nuances of the English language 🌿
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