Women without the complications,Right bois, are boyish girls ur type?
Why do people do that? Why do they make declarative statements, and then append a question mark to the end of it even though they weren't asking a question?The second page gave you a lot of trouble, didn't it? It's something like "I'm a proper woman underneath these clothes, after all." "If you wanna see, then let's hurry up and go somewhere we can be alone" She wasn't asing if he thought she was more womanly under the clothes, but rather asserting it outright despite the literal presence of a question mark.
Women are women, tomboyish or not. The complications come not only from being different people (never mind that people regularly have conflicts with themselves), but also from-- ultimately-- men and women not being familiar with being the other.Women without the complications,
or
A homie with tits
So yes.
Here is just looks like the equivalent of "you know?" Like "Hey, I got this stuff on, but underneath it all, I've still got some huge honkers, ok?" That's usually how it goes. It's a reminder.Why do people do that? Why do they make declarative statements, and then append a question mark to the end of it even though they weren't asking a question?
Agreed. Woman can be MUCH smaller.. OR VERY MUCH LARGER.To say that is "biologically impossible" is to give away that you've never seen a woman.
I never said they weren't? I was just making a joke how a woman can be "one of the boys" and unlike the average woman actually say what they want, don't take hours to get ready, is just overall chill to be with and so onWomen are women, tomboyish or not. The complications come not only from being different people (never mind that people regularly have conflicts with themselves), but also from-- ultimately-- men and women not being familiar with being the other.
Hell yeah, give me a reverse trap or any flavor of tomboy, or give me DEATH!Right bois, are boyish girls ur type?
If they're not, why are you even here?Right bois, are boyish girls ur type?
It's called a declarative questions, basically in English there are questions that act like statements and don't require an answer.Why do people do that? Why do they make declarative statements, and then append a question mark to the end of it even though they weren't asking a question?
I've seen it in English, too. I used to think it was a young-adult-woman-on-Tumblr-or-Twitter thing, but no, apparently it's a feature in Japanese too.
Women are women, tomboyish or not. The complications come not only from being different people (never mind that people regularly have conflicts with themselves), but also from-- ultimately-- men and women not being familiar with being the other.
I don't know how I went so long in life without encountering this "end declarative statements with a question mark" technique..I never said they weren't?
A declarative question can be converted into a regular interrogative and has the same meaning as such (e.g. "You want to join?" is a shorter form of "Do you want to join?").It's called a declarative questions, basically in English there are questions that act like statements and don't require an answer.
Not how that's used. Imagine someone asking you why he has to go through an initiation for a group. You come at him with a "You want to join?" Which is a "Because you want to join" in declarative question form.A declarative question can be converted into a regular interrogative and has the same meaning as such (e.g. "You want to join?" is a shorter form of "Do you want to join?").
Another declarative statement. Well done this time.That's different than just writing-- for example-- "I didn't say that?"