also not sure its come up yet, im 99% sure that there is a desision to add forts to plunder camps though this might have been new to bitucket when i was playig masked butcher
Well well well look who finally decided to play orks. And now that you have,you're legally obligated to talk like a ork warboss from warhammer 40k because you're British. I knew this day would arrive.
Autonomy and crownland in bad shape yet you say that reform is a roadblock I enjoyed your play though and would not be able menage your wars personally, thank you for some fun
@@LambertVOD Definitely i got there in about 1520s and I didn't play that much different from you( i had a lot less money early because of empty colony provinces) for faster expansion. Some missions give extra things if you do it under the term of the first guy.
any foolish enough is proper grammar. You don't need the word one. you use it the same way you would say any item round enough. or any beast large enough. you don't need to say any one beast large enough, just the word any will do. and if the subject is implied you don't need to list the subject either. say we were looking at beds. you could say any large enough will do. if we are in a mattress shop. we don't need to say the word mattress. because context covers it. so any foolish enough to stand against us is just fine. better actually because anyone would be singular. any one person foolish enough to stand against us. Any on the other hand could be plural. any foolish enough to stand against us covers both groups and individuals. but isn't as all encompassing as all or everyone. on the other hand. you frequently use AN and A wrong. you don't Make AN question. you make a question. you don't need An general. you need A general. you only use An if the following word has a vowel for the first letter. you need AN Anvil but A hammer. it is deeply ironic that you criticize correct grammar with incorrect grammar. I usually don't nitpick speech. but if your going to do it... and be wrong about it... you should be more careful yourself.
"on the other hand. you frequently use AN and A wrong. you don't Make AN question" Oh this is entirely deliberate. I am aware it is wrong... started as copying Jeremy Clarkson and then just kind of evolved. I use it for emphasis? Or just cause it tickles me? Idk. But yes, you're not the first to point out I was wrong on the "any foolish enough" bit. Reading it back, I do agree.
A vs AN also has exceptions for "sounds like it starts with a vowel" and "used to sound like it starts with a vowel", too. "An historic event" for example.
any foolish enough does actually work grammatically.
Truly THE run!
3:03:00 Howling in Orcish fury! The cruel twists of fate conspire against the orcs
2:45 thats not a grammar error... any is its own word and refers to unknown quantities of anything
also not sure its come up yet, im 99% sure that there is a desision to add forts to plunder camps though this might have been new to bitucket when i was playig masked butcher
Yes there is a decision you can do to build forts.
Yes, it is located in the province view
Well well well look who finally decided to play orks.
And now that you have,you're legally obligated to talk like a ork warboss from warhammer 40k because you're British.
I knew this day would arrive.
Autonomy and crownland in bad shape yet you say that reform is a roadblock
I enjoyed your play though and would not be able menage your wars personally, thank you for some fun
Wow it took you 100 years to get there must have had bad luck with demonstration and also didn't keep the autonomy low early game.
yeah that was pretty depressing.
@@LambertVOD Definitely i got there in about 1520s and I didn't play that much different from you( i had a lot less money early because of empty colony provinces) for faster expansion. Some missions give extra things if you do it under the term of the first guy.
any foolish enough is proper grammar. You don't need the word one. you use it the same way you would say any item round enough. or any beast large enough. you don't need to say any one beast large enough, just the word any will do.
and if the subject is implied you don't need to list the subject either. say we were looking at beds. you could say any large enough will do. if we are in a mattress shop. we don't need to say the word mattress. because context covers it.
so any foolish enough to stand against us is just fine. better actually because anyone would be singular. any one person foolish enough to stand against us. Any on the other hand could be plural. any foolish enough to stand against us covers both groups and individuals. but isn't as all encompassing as all or everyone.
on the other hand. you frequently use AN and A wrong. you don't Make AN question. you make a question. you don't need An general. you need A general. you only use An if the following word has a vowel for the first letter. you need AN Anvil but A hammer.
it is deeply ironic that you criticize correct grammar with incorrect grammar. I usually don't nitpick speech. but if your going to do it... and be wrong about it... you should be more careful yourself.
"on the other hand. you frequently use AN and A wrong. you don't Make AN question"
Oh this is entirely deliberate. I am aware it is wrong... started as copying Jeremy Clarkson and then just kind of evolved. I use it for emphasis? Or just cause it tickles me? Idk.
But yes, you're not the first to point out I was wrong on the "any foolish enough" bit. Reading it back, I do agree.
@LambertVOD ok then. Sorry I missed the joke/reference. I doo feel like a bit of an ass about the comment in retrospect.
It's all good friend :)
A vs AN also has exceptions for "sounds like it starts with a vowel" and "used to sound like it starts with a vowel", too. "An historic event" for example.