The Funny Screenshot Thread

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Sponsored tweet came in at the perfect time. Read from bottom to top. Not sure what size these images will be on your monitors since they're coming from my phone, so read the bottom image first.

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EDIT: Wow! They really do care about their customers and giving them the best experience possible for $99 on an iPhone game! Brilliant!
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That still bothers me greatly. It's "I'm," not "i'm." Come on, Google.
It is a shame you are American or I could have got you on the double quote marks. In British English you are meant to use singles. No one bothers with that rule though.
 
It is a shame you are American or I could have got you on the double quote marks. In British English you are meant to use singles. No one bothers with that rule though.

I bet you don't use Oxford Commas, either. :P
 
British English

Erm...you mean English? Since the language originates from Britain there is no need to specify. All other forms of English are dialects*, e.g. American English, Singaporian English, etc.

We don't call French 'French French' when referring to their French as opposed to Canadian French or Congolese French, do we?

There are plenty of grammatical differences between English and American English and in their own place neither difference is 'wrong' perse, but because of the expanse of American English in the last 50 years the widest spoken form of English is the American kind. All us Brits can do is keep our English correct and hope that it doesn't die out and become replaced with the lazier American version.

*My opinion and part truth.
 
We don't call French 'French French' when referring to their French as opposed to Canadian French or Congolese French, do we?

Actually, this came up in an Infield argument once. Remember the Canadian chap who was really good at languages with the slushbox Scooby? Yeah, that.

It is sometimes needed to differentiate for comparitive purposes and the term for 'French French' is either standard French or metropolitan French, as opposed to Canadian French, Jersey legal French, Swiss French, Belgian French or any other recognised variety of French.

Interesting that you chose the French language. French is an officially standardised language so the need for such terms is necessary.

Screenshot Tax:

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