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Message
From
24/02/2004 17:37:55
 
 
To
21/02/2004 16:49:54
General information
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Category:
Contracts, agreements and general business
Title:
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
00877434
Message ID:
00880514
Views:
19
Pardon me for jumping in. For me, being Dutch and not a native speaker of English, the expression 'I remember a scam like that' is indeed interpreted to mean that 'that' is also seen as scam. So, I agree with Denis.

But now a question. I didn't know that word, so I looked it up on www.dictionary.com (thesaurus). Which meaning was meant: fool, defraud, mislead, trick, false, overstate? Or are they all the same? If not, may it be that Denis had another definition come to mind than Hank meant?

To be clear about my own position: I think that we all here should not be too softhearted.


>Indeed; and if you want to infer from that, fine, but let's not confuse your inference with my assertion, which was that I remembered a scam like that, not that this a scam. It was a warning to look carefully, not a judgment; that judgment came from your inference.
>
>
>>You said
>>
>>I remember a scam like that
>>
>>>I didn't: reread what I wrote.
>>>
>>>>How do you come to the conclusion that this is a scam?
>>>>
[snip]
Groet,
Peter de Valença

Constructive frustration is the breeding ground of genius.
If there’s no willingness to moderate for the sake of good debate, then I have no willingness to debate at all.
Let's develop superb standards that will end the holy wars.
"There are three types of people: Alphas and Betas", said the beta decisively.
If you find this message rude or offensive or stupid, please take a step away from the keyboard and try to think calmly about an eventual a possible alternative explanation of my message.
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