Just Blue
Senior Member
Yes. Riddled with misinformation. Or is it ridden?Haha. Some students apparently are harder to teach than others.
Yes. Riddled with misinformation. Or is it ridden?Haha. Some students apparently are harder to teach than others.
Friday was "take-out night" when I was a kid. I was about 10 and my Mom would give me a list of what to order along with a ten dollar bill. 5 burgers, 5 fries, 5 drinks and as long as you didn't get a shake you could get an apple pie. That would have been in '75 . I always got change (coins along with bills).I believe it was around in the early to mid 70's. It was a little bit of a stretch even then.
What you wrote: bullet-riddled bullet-proof glass: wrongYou're the one who thought it a good thing to write.
Still smh.What you wrote: bullet-riddled bullet-proof glass: wrong
What I wrote: Bullet-ridden bullet-proof glass: right
Why?Still smh.
Nope. Wrong again.What you wrote: bullet-riddled bullet-proof glass: wrong
What I wrote: Bullet-ridden bullet-proof glass: right
OK:Nope. Wrong again.
What do you think "bullet-ridden" means?
I agree that "bullet-riddled bullet proof glass" is a stupid thing to say. So is "bullet-ridden bullet proof."
But "bullet-riddled" is the correct phrase and "bullet-ridden" is an incorrect phrase (albeit an error made by others beside you).
You can be debt-ridden or disease-ridden or guilt-ridden.
But there is no bullet-ridden.
There is riddled by bullets or bullet-riddled.
Look up the definitions of ridden and riddled.
Oh dear.OK:
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/ridden
2: excessively full of or supplied with —usually used in combination
Therefore, "bullet-ridden" would mean "full of bullets," which is what you might expect.
Can't make TSU.Oh dear.
Several years ago I went to a KFC in what (I thought) wasn't that bad of a neighborhood They had bullet-proof glass between the employees and the customers.
Major Payne, I don't know how you came up with this reaction to Zig's post.Bullet-ridden bullet-proof glass?
I was making a joke regarding his bad neighborhood statement, asking if the bulletproof glass separating the customers from the employees (which implies it is a bad neighborhood) was also bullet-ridden (implying it's a really bad neighborhood).Major Payne, I don't know how you came up with this reaction to Zig's post.
There was nothing in Zig's posts about bullet holes (bullet riddled) or bullets embedded (bullet ridden), just a statement that there was bullet proof glass.
Stop crossing double yellow lines while spritzing yourself with cologne and call it a day.
Just think: Had you used the correct word, you would have been totally ignored.I was making a joke regarding his bad neighborhood statement, asking if the bulletproof glass separating the customers from the employees (which implies it is a bad neighborhood) was also bullet-ridden (implying it's a really bad neighborhood).
I did use the correct word.Just think: Had you used the correct word, you would have been totally ignored.
Well ... no. But you can believe that if you want to.I did use the correct word.