Explaining the top five people you don’t want to meet online.
The Elitist Nobs
these are the kind of people that think there better than you in every or most single way.Usually its because they think there at a higher status or have done somthing important in the past.
The Whiney Little Kid
The whiny little kid loves to complain and just generally be annoying.These people are usually aged between 7-13 or are new to the Internet,demanding a answer to everything.Otherwise know as your average runescape player
The Greifer
Also know as Mr screw up everything you worked for, the griefer loved to just mess up anything your doing and laughing at you as your trying to fix whatever he just destroyed or broke.Sometimes he likes to block narrow passageways so no one can get in.
The Pedo
constantly looking for girls aged from 4-16 these predators will often be lurking about in chat rooms mabe even msn, they are usually male. They usually start the conversation with a/s/l and will ask for cam.Look out!
The Troll
Trolls like the griefer just love to mess things up but trolls love to annoy the crap out of you with crappy yo moma jokes. The usually start a conversation with questions to get to know you and then use the information against you.Usually found on the dreaded 4Chan













June 17th, 2009 at 12:12 pm
Pop quiz for anyone who passed grade-school grammar. How many errors can you spot in the following sentence:
“Usually its because they think there at a higher status or have done somthing important in the past.”
I count three. Here they are:
1. There should be an apostrophe in “its” when used as an abbreviation for “it is”.
2. “There” does not mean the same thing as “they’re”. The second one is an abbreviation for “they are,” which is what the author is trying to say.
3. “Something” is misspelled.
So I guess you can call me an elitist nob if you want. But when I see that many mistakes in just one sentence, I find it hard to put much faith in anything you say. You could have fixed one of those problems with a simple spellcheck.
Stuff like this reflects poorly on Triond. But more importantly, if you want to be a paid author, I would think you’d take more pride in your work. The English language is the main tool of your trade, and using it incorrectly makes you look foolish.