“Could of” instead of “Could’ve”“Could have” is not a typical mistake people make that have English as their second language.
“Could of” instead of “Could’ve”“Could have” is not a typical mistake people make that have English as their second language.
I don’t get the constant hate for badminton. If one of those should have been dropped it’s tennis.
Have you tried turning it off and on again?
Yeah, funny story:
I work for the government and once during an inspection they noticed that a light on the roof our building needed to be replaced.
What should be a 5 minute task took many months. Why? Safety rules state that only roofers are allowed to enter the roof, but only electricians are allowed to work on anything that has to do with electricity which includes changing a light bulb. So we had to wait a couple of months for one of the electricians to get certified as a person that can enter the roof.
No, I don’t think that the levels become harder. They also gift so many free boosters to the players that it is way easier than 10 years ago when I first played the game.
I also feel like that after failing a level too often, that the game is cheating for you so that you don’t lose interest.
3234, which according to the game 7% of players reached.
I was on level 2k5 years ago when there were only 3k levels. Now there are 15k…
It is from xkcd: https://xkcd.com/838/
The fact that you think this needs a citation shows that you are a native speaker.
These might be no high quality sources, but it shows that it is something that non native speakers find weird:
Quora1
Quora2
Reddit
Blog entry about mistakes that native speakers make
Another similar blog
Oh, and here is a PhD thesis where you can see in chapter 5.2 “Error processing cost” that this type of error is more disrupting for non native than for native speakers.