Page 183 of 240

Re: Last person to post wins. . . . .

Posted: Thu May 16, 2019 6:53 am
by Harvonsgard
TwoPiece wrote:"_____ is bae" wouldn't translate to "_____ is babe".
Bae derived from "bay", which is short for "baby" (which is ridicolously retarded. But hey, it isn't my mother tongue that gets butchered by backronyms and akronyms every day :lol: ). It then was turned by "cool kids" to "bae", which then afterwards was translated into "before anyone else". Long story short, both of you are right.
Bae nowadays can be translated with "before anyone (or anything) else". But the origin is the short form of "baby" and not the meaning "before anyone else"!

Just like M.O.A.B. was and officially is short for "Massive Ordnance Air Blast", but in general public it has turned into "Mother Of All Bombs".

Damn, I feel nerdy now... :geek:

Re: Last person to post wins. . . . .

Posted: Thu May 16, 2019 7:26 am
by theCapraAegagrus
shiroo56 wrote:
TwoPiece wrote:"_____ is bae" wouldn't translate to "_____ is babe".
Bae derived from "bay", which is short for "baby" (which is ridicolously retarded. But hey, it isn't my mother tongue that gets butchered by backronyms and akronyms every day :lol: ). It then was turned by "cool kids" to "bae", which then afterwards was translated into "before anyone else". Long story short, both of you are right.
Bae nowadays can be translated with "before anyone (or anything) else". But the origin is the short form of "baby" and not the meaning "before anyone else"!

Just like M.O.A.B. was and officially is short for "Massive Ordnance Air Blast", but in general public it has turned into "Mother Of All Bombs".

Damn, I feel nerdy now... :geek:
FYI: I was never implying that the origin of "bae" was an acronym. Simply that it's used primarily as one, today.

And I've never even heard of "MOAB" before. So wtf are you talking about..?

Re: Last person to post wins. . . . .

Posted: Thu May 16, 2019 7:34 am
by Harvonsgard
TwoPiece wrote:FYI: I was never implying that the origin of "bae" was an acronym. Simply that it's used primarily as one, today.
Ehm, I never implied, that you implied. I just wrote that both of you are correct :D .
FYI: It still is and never will be an acronym, thought this should be clear by now. It is a backronym. :ugdance:
TwoPiece wrote:And I've never even heard of "MOAB" before. So wtf are you talking about..?
It was just another example for acronym/backronym. So wtf are you asking about? :lol: :lol:

Re: Last person to post wins. . . . .

Posted: Thu May 16, 2019 7:52 am
by theCapraAegagrus
shiroo56 wrote:
TwoPiece wrote:FYI: I was never implying that the origin of "bae" was an acronym. Simply that it's used primarily as one, today.
Ehm, I never implied, that you implied. I just wrote that both of you are correct :D .
FYI: It still is and never will be an acronym, thought this should be clear by now. It is a backronym. :ugdance:
TwoPiece wrote:And I've never even heard of "MOAB" before. So wtf are you talking about..?
It was just another example for acronym/backronym. So wtf are you asking about? :lol: :lol:
"Bae" is not a real world, therefor it is not a "backronym". "BAE" is an acronym.

Also, I never implied that you implied that I implied anything. However, your post suggests that Merlebird inferred some implication that I was surely not making, hence the heads-up FYI.

Re: Last person to post wins. . . . .

Posted: Thu May 16, 2019 8:10 am
by Harvonsgard
TwoPiece wrote:"Bae" is not a real world, therefor it is not a "backronym". "BAE" is an acronym.
Image

Re: Last person to post wins. . . . .

Posted: Thu May 16, 2019 8:16 am
by theCapraAegagrus
shiroo56 wrote:
TwoPiece wrote:"Bae" is not a real world, therefor it is not a "backronym". "BAE" is an acronym.
Image
Let me rephrase. "Bae" is not a real English word.

Re: Last person to post wins. . . . .

Posted: Thu May 16, 2019 8:21 am
by Harvonsgard
TwoPiece wrote:Let me rephrase. "Bae" is not a real English word.
Yah, it is a backronym... we are kind off circle-jerking here... :lol: :lol: :lol:

Re: Last person to post wins. . . . .

Posted: Thu May 16, 2019 8:28 am
by theCapraAegagrus
shiroo56 wrote:
TwoPiece wrote:Let me rephrase. "Bae" is not a real English word.
Yah, it is a backronym... we are kind off circle-jerking here... :lol: :lol: :lol:
Not really, because "backronyms" are based off WORDS. If "bae" is not a real word then "BAE" cannot be a "backronym" (which is also not a real word).

I'm trying to communicate in English, here, not gibberish.

Re: Last person to post wins. . . . .

Posted: Thu May 16, 2019 8:40 am
by Harvonsgard
TwoPiece wrote:
shiroo56 wrote:
TwoPiece wrote:Let me rephrase. "Bae" is not a real English word.
Yah, it is a backronym... we are kind off circle-jerking here... :lol: :lol: :lol:
Not really, because "backronyms" are based off WORDS. If "bae" is not a real word then "BAE" cannot be a "backronym" (which is also not a real word).
... if that is the premise, than it can't be an acronym either ... what are you trying to prove here? :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:

Re: Last person to post wins. . . . .

Posted: Thu May 16, 2019 8:53 am
by theCapraAegagrus
shiroo56 wrote:
TwoPiece wrote:
shiroo56 wrote:
TwoPiece wrote:Let me rephrase. "Bae" is not a real English word.
Yah, it is a backronym... we are kind off circle-jerking here... :lol: :lol: :lol:
Not really, because "backronyms" are based off WORDS. If "bae" is not a real word then "BAE" cannot be a "backronym" (which is also not a real word).
... if that is the premise, than it can't be an acronym either ... what are you trying to prove here? :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:
It can be, and is, an acronym because the words that form "BAE" are all real English words... That's all...

Re: Last person to post wins. . . . .

Posted: Thu May 16, 2019 9:07 am
by Harvonsgard
TwoPiece wrote:It can be, and is, an acronym because the words that form "BAE" are all real English words... That's all...
Image again...

To qualify as an acronym the words must have been there from the start. :mrgreen:

Re: Last person to post wins. . . . .

Posted: Thu May 16, 2019 9:09 am
by Merlebird
TwoPiece wrote:
shiroo56 wrote:
TwoPiece wrote:"Bae" is not a real word, therefore it is not a "backronym". "BAE" is an acronym.
Image
Let me rephrase. "Bae" is not a real English word.
I for one am immensely grateful we have this internet rando to tell the entire rest of the English-speaking diaspora which words are "real"

buddy that ain't how languages work and you know it

Re: Last person to post wins. . . . .

Posted: Thu May 16, 2019 9:12 am
by Harvonsgard
Merlebird wrote:buddy that ain't how languages work and you know it
He is to stuburn to admit that... just like his appreciation for anyone worldwide decks! :mrgreen: :lol:

Re: Last person to post wins. . . . .

Posted: Thu May 16, 2019 9:44 am
by theCapraAegagrus
shiroo56 wrote:
TwoPiece wrote:It can be, and is, an acronym because the words that form "BAE" are all real English words... That's all...
Image again...

To qualify as an acronym the words must have been there from the start. :mrgreen:
What are you talking about..? An acronym itself does not need to be a word. "NHL" is not a word. It's an acronym. "Bae" is not a word (slang). "BAE" is an acronym. This is how English works, my friend.

Re: Last person to post wins. . . . .

Posted: Thu May 16, 2019 9:46 am
by theCapraAegagrus
Merlebird wrote:
TwoPiece wrote:
shiroo56 wrote:
TwoPiece wrote:"Bae" is not a real word, therefore it is not a "backronym". "BAE" is an acronym.
Image
Let me rephrase. "Bae" is not a real English word.
I for one am immensely grateful we have this internet rando to tell the entire rest of the English-speaking diaspora which words are "real"

buddy that ain't how languages work and you know it
Actually, it is. English is a defined language. Slang is not proper English. Therefor, slang words are not English words. They're fake. I don't decide this, but I can certainly tell you what is and is not real English.

You can make up all of the pretend words you want. They're still not English/American-English. That's how language works (not just English, either).

You can't type "hkjab.sdlbvfliqyerv/'[[]prekqgkj" and say, "it's C++". Again, you'd be incorrect.

Re: Last person to post wins. . . . .

Posted: Thu May 16, 2019 10:01 am
by Harvonsgard
TwoPiece wrote:Actually, it is. English is a defined language. Slang is not proper English. Therefor, slang words are not English words. They're fake. I don't decide this, but I can certainly tell you what is and is not real English.
It is not. Language evolves. You aren't writting or talking like Shakespeare, I wonder why.
Between my school enrollment and today, there were two big spelling reforms in Germany. What was spelled wrong in the past, became correct. So, who defines what?
TwoPiece wrote:You can make up all of the pretend words you want. They're still not English/American-English. That's how language works (not just English, either).
Pretty bold statement for somebody that doesn't accept the official definition of "acronym" and tries to prove something which is just wrong. :D
TwoPiece wrote:You can't type "hkjab.sdlbvfliqyerv/'[[]prekqgkj" and say, "it's C++". Again, you'd be incorrect.
This is true. Just as you can't type that "bae" is an acronym, without being wrong. :lol: :lol: :lol:

And now hush, be quiet and gimme a hug you ol'grumpy care bear.

Re: Last person to post wins. . . . .

Posted: Thu May 16, 2019 10:03 am
by theCapraAegagrus
shiroo56 wrote:
TwoPiece wrote:Actually, it is. English is a defined language. Slang is not proper English. Therefor, slang words are not English words. They're fake. I don't decide this, but I can certainly tell you what is and is not real English.
It is not. Language evolves. You aren't writting or talking like Shakespeare, I wonder why.
Between my school enrollment and today, there were two big spelling reforms in Germany. What was spelled wrong in the past, became correct. So, who defines what?
TwoPiece wrote:You can make up all of the pretend words you want. They're still not English/American-English. That's how language works (not just English, either).
Pretty bold statement for somebody that doesn't accept the official definition of "acronym" and tries to prove something which is just wrong. :D
TwoPiece wrote:You can't type "hkjab.sdlbvfliqyerv/'[[]prekqgkj" and say, "it's C++". Again, you'd be incorrect.
This is true. Just as you can't type that "bae" is an acronym, without being wrong. :lol: :lol: :lol:
Language does evolve. The English language has not "evolved" to include "bae". Doesn't change anything.

It's not a bold statement, as nothing I have said lends any support to me "not accepting" the definition of "acronym". Being "said as a word" does not make a word.

BAE is an acronym. How this fact eludes you is beyond comprehensive understanding. Maybe you're misunderstanding how capital and lowercase letters work? Either way, it's beyond Earth-1218.

"Bae" is slang and not English. BAE is an acronym. Very straightforward.

Re: Last person to post wins. . . . .

Posted: Thu May 16, 2019 10:11 am
by Harvonsgard
TwoPiece wrote:BAE is an acronym. How this fact eludes you is beyond comprehensive understanding. Maybe you're misunderstand how capital and lowercase letters work? Either way, it's beyond Earth-1218.
Wikipedia wrote:"An acronym is a word or name formed as an abbreviation from the initial components of a phrase or a word, usually individual letters, as in NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization) or BSA (Boy Scouts of America) and sometimes syllables (as in "Benelux")"
I always love how people just bend definitions to claim they are right when they are inherently wrong. :mrgreen: :lol:

You can post all day. But that does not make "bae" an acronym. end of the line.

*drops mic*

Re: Last person to post wins. . . . .

Posted: Thu May 16, 2019 10:12 am
by theCapraAegagrus
shiroo56 wrote:
TwoPiece wrote:BAE is an acronym. How this fact eludes you is beyond comprehensive understanding. Maybe you're misunderstand how capital and lowercase letters work? Either way, it's beyond Earth-1218.
Wikipedia wrote:"An acronym is a word or name formed as an abbreviation from the initial components of a phrase or a word, usually individual letters, as in NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization) or BSA (Boy Scouts of America) and sometimes syllables (as in "Benelux")"
I always love how people just bend definitions to claim they are right when they are inherently wrong. :mrgreen: :lol:

You can post all day. But that does not make "bae" an acronym. end of the line.

*drops mic*
Do you realize that you proved my point..?

Before
Anyone
Else

..?

Re: Last person to post wins. . . . .

Posted: Thu May 16, 2019 10:20 am
by Harvonsgard
TwoPiece wrote:
shiroo56 wrote:
TwoPiece wrote:BAE is an acronym. How this fact eludes you is beyond comprehensive understanding. Maybe you're misunderstand how capital and lowercase letters work? Either way, it's beyond Earth-1218.
Wikipedia wrote:"An acronym is a word or name formed as an abbreviation from the initial components of a phrase or a word, usually individual letters, as in NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization) or BSA (Boy Scouts of America) and sometimes syllables (as in "Benelux")"
I always love how people just bend definitions to claim they are right when they are inherently wrong. :mrgreen: :lol:

You can post all day. But that does not make "bae" an acronym. end of the line.

*drops mic*
Do you realize that you proved my point..?

Before
Anyone
Else

..?
I just realized that you're either trolling :shock:

or, which would be pretty weird, you don't know what "initial" means... :?

Either way. You are pretty funny. I like you.

Re: Last person to post wins. . . . .

Posted: Thu May 16, 2019 10:23 am
by theCapraAegagrus
shiroo56 wrote:I just realized that you're either trolling :shock:

or, which would be pretty weird, you don't know what "initial" means... :?

Either way. You are pretty funny. I like you.
Read. The. Definition. That. You. Quoted.

Either YOU're trolling or literally illiterate.

Initials. Are. What. Create. Acronyms.

At this point it's more annoying than righteous to teach this shit.

National
Hockey
League

Before
Anyone
Else

Both acronyms.

Re: Last person to post wins. . . . .

Posted: Thu May 16, 2019 10:30 am
by theCapraAegagrus
Image

Re: Last person to post wins. . . . .

Posted: Thu May 16, 2019 10:39 am
by BaconWise
I hate to give this word even more attention, but it looks like Oxford has indeed added BAE to the official English language and most agree it is an abbreviation of the word BABE. However, Urban Dictionary does indicate the use of BAE as an acronym for "Before Anyone Else" so I get the feeling both sides are right in this discussion. While not official English language, Urban Dictionary is an accurate source for slang definitions, and not to be discounted. Carry on, friends.

Oxford Dictionary Definition:
"
bae"
NOUN
US
informal
A person's boyfriend or girlfriend (often as a form of address) ‘I'm going to see my bae’
as name ‘Bae just made me tacos’ - ‘what's wrong, bae?’
Origin
Early 21st century: abbreviation of baby or babe.

Urban Dictionary
"Bae"
AAVE (African-American Vernacular English) pronunciation of "babe," used as a term of endearment toward loved ones. "Bae" can be a pronoun or an adjective. The term caught fire to mainstream colloquial Standard American English jargon and, due to unfamiliarity with its origins, developed multiple definitions. Trolls and people who dislike its use will often incorrectly juxtapose "bae" with Danish "bæ" which means "poop" (often to shut people up). Others will treat it as an acronym such as "before anyone else." The term is frowned upon by many, as it is seen as ghetto and uncouth, although its origins are simply dialectal.

Re: Last person to post wins. . . . .

Posted: Thu May 16, 2019 10:44 am
by theCapraAegagrus
BaconWise wrote:I hate to give this word even more attention, but it looks like Oxford has indeed added BAE to the official English language and most agree it is an abbreviation of the word BABE. However, Urban Dictionary does indicate the use of BAE as an acronym for "Before Anyone Else" so I get the feeling both sides are right in this discussion. While not official English language, Urban Dictionary is an accurate source for slang definitions, and not to be discounted. Carry on, friends.

Oxford Dictionary Definition:
"
bae"
NOUN
US
informal
A person's boyfriend or girlfriend (often as a form of address) ‘I'm going to see my bae’
as name ‘Bae just made me tacos’ - ‘what's wrong, bae?’
Origin
Early 21st century: abbreviation of baby or babe.

Urban Dictionary
"Bae"
AAVE (African-American Vernacular English) pronunciation of "babe," used as a term of endearment toward loved ones. "Bae" can be a pronoun or an adjective. The term caught fire to mainstream colloquial Standard American English jargon and, due to unfamiliarity with its origins, developed multiple definitions. Trolls and people who dislike its use will often incorrectly juxtapose "bae" with Danish "bæ" which means "poop" (often to shut people up). Others will treat it as an acronym such as "before anyone else." The term is frowned upon by many, as it is seen as ghetto and uncouth, although its origins are simply dialectal.
I find "poop" to be the most universally correct definition of "bae".

Re: Last person to post wins. . . . .

Posted: Thu May 16, 2019 11:35 am
by Merlebird
TwoPiece wrote:
Merlebird wrote:I for one am immensely grateful we have this internet rando to tell the entire rest of the English-speaking diaspora which words are "real"

buddy that ain't how languages work and you know it

Actually, it is. English is a defined language. Slang is not proper English. Therefor, slang words are not English words. They're fake. I don't decide this, but I can certainly tell you what is and is not real English.

You can make up all of the pretend words you want. They're still not English/American-English. That's how language works (not just English, either).

You can't type "hkjab.sdlbvfliqyerv/'[[]prekqgkj" and say, "it's C++". Again, you'd be incorrect.
Wow. Okay. I have zero expectation that anything I'm about to say will move the needle on what is clearly a value judgment for you, but for the benefit of others reading I feel obligated to point out that what you've just said is entirely, fractally wrong.
TwoPiece wrote:English is a defined language.
Anything you could mean by this is either unsupportive of the point you're trying to make or just factually untrue. English is "defined" in the sense that it is a natural language generally recognized as distinct from and mutually unintelligible with closely related languages (e.g. Flemish). It is not "defined" in the sense that there is a governing council or preeminent authority that sanctions neologisms for use in official or semiofficial contexts, as, say, the Académie française does (or attempts to do) for French. Even if such a body did exist for English, though:
TwoPiece wrote:Slang is not proper English. Therefore, slang words are not English words. They're fake.
Willfully or otherwise, you're conflating Standard American English - a social and political construction dictated by hegemonic authorities (e.g. academia, the government, the press) - with English, which is a natural language actively and collaboratively constructed and reconstructed by the entirety of its speakers. In a UK context, where "received pronunciation" and other linguistic standards for broadcasting purposes are deliberately modeled after the way the reigning monarch speaks, this would be equivalent to saying "shit" is a fake word because the queen doesn't use it.
TwoPiece wrote:You can make up all of the pretend words you want. They're still not English/American-English. That's how language works (not just English, either).
If I coin a word and use it when speaking English, and other English speakers acquire the word from me and use it in their own speech, and other English speakers acquire it from them and so on until a statistically significant proportion of native speakers understand it as a word that exists in English, that is literally exactly how language works. You wrote your post on a "computer," or a "cellphone," connected to the "internet." Where do you think those words came from, exactly? Where do you think any words come from? Did you imagine God attended Adam in the Garden of Eden and handed him a Speak 'n' Spell?
TwoPiece wrote:You can't type "hkjab.sdlbvfliqyerv/'[[]prekqgkj" and say, "it's C++". Again, you'd be incorrect.
C++ is a synthetic, computational language built to interpret a limited, predefined set of commands. The reason you can't type "hkjab.sdlbvfliqyerv/'[[]prekqgkj" into a C++ compiler and expect it to run is the same reason you can't ask your desk calculator what you should have for breakfast: it hasn't been programmed to receive and interpret input of that type. Humans are (for the time being and for the foreseeable future) much better at natural language processing than adding machines, which is why, when I said "that ain't how languages work" - a clause that incorporates an infamous exemplar of "improper" English! - you were able to respond (sort of) appropriately, instead of throwing a fatal error and having to be rebooted.

Bonus round: all of this was in "support" of your thesis:
TwoPiece wrote:"backronyms" are based off WORDS. If "bae" is not a real word then "BAE" cannot be a "backronym" (which is also not a real word).
As BaconWise pointed out, if being in the Oxford English Dictionary isn't sufficient to convince you that bae and backronym are "real" English words, then it's difficult to imagine what external authority you are referencing in making these determinations. Cite your sources or gtfo.

Re: Last person to post wins. . . . .

Posted: Thu May 16, 2019 11:40 am
by Harvonsgard
In a more important note. What does the “(wap)” behind some titles mean?

Re: Last person to post wins. . . . .

Posted: Thu May 16, 2019 11:42 am
by theCapraAegagrus
Merlebird wrote:
TwoPiece wrote:
Merlebird wrote:I for one am immensely grateful we have this internet rando to tell the entire rest of the English-speaking diaspora which words are "real"

buddy that ain't how languages work and you know it

Actually, it is. English is a defined language. Slang is not proper English. Therefor, slang words are not English words. They're fake. I don't decide this, but I can certainly tell you what is and is not real English.

You can make up all of the pretend words you want. They're still not English/American-English. That's how language works (not just English, either).

You can't type "hkjab.sdlbvfliqyerv/'[[]prekqgkj" and say, "it's C++". Again, you'd be incorrect.
Wow. Okay. I have zero expectation that anything I'm about to say will move the needle on what is clearly a value judgment for you, but for the benefit of others reading I feel obligated to point out that what you've just said is entirely, fractally wrong.
TwoPiece wrote:English is a defined language.
Anything you could mean by this is either unsupportive of the point you're trying to make or just factually untrue. English is "defined" in the sense that it is a natural language generally recognized as distinct from and mutually unintelligible with closely related languages (e.g. Flemish). It is not "defined" in the sense that there is a governing council or preeminent authority that sanctions neologisms for use in official or semiofficial contexts, as, say, the Académie française does (or attempts to do) for French. Even if such a body did exist for English, though:
TwoPiece wrote:Slang is not proper English. Therefore, slang words are not English words. They're fake.
Willfully or otherwise, you're conflating Standard American English - a social and political construction dictated by hegemonic authorities (e.g. academia, the government, the press) - with English, which is a natural language actively and collaboratively constructed and reconstructed by the entirety of its speakers. In a UK context, where "received pronunciation" and other linguistic standards for broadcasting purposes are deliberately modeled after the way the reigning monarch speaks, this would be equivalent to saying "shit" is a fake word because the queen doesn't use it.
TwoPiece wrote:You can make up all of the pretend words you want. They're still not English/American-English. That's how language works (not just English, either).
If I coin a word and use it when speaking English, and other English speakers acquire the word from me and use it in their own speech, and other English speakers acquire it from them and so on until a statistically significant proportion of native speakers understand it as a word that exists in English, that is literally exactly how language works. You wrote your post on a "computer," or a "cellphone," connected to the "internet." Where do you think those words came from, exactly? Where do you think any words come from? Did you imagine God attended Adam in the Garden of Eden and handed him a Speak 'n' Spell?
TwoPiece wrote:You can't type "hkjab.sdlbvfliqyerv/'[[]prekqgkj" and say, "it's C++". Again, you'd be incorrect.
C++ is a synthetic, computational language built to interpret a limited, predefined set of commands. The reason you can't type "hkjab.sdlbvfliqyerv/'[[]prekqgkj" into a C++ compiler and expect it to run is the same reason you can't ask your desk calculator what you should have for breakfast: it hasn't been programmed to receive and interpret input of that type. Humans are (for the time being and for the foreseeable future) much better at natural language processing than adding machines, which is why, when I said "that ain't how languages work" - a clause that incorporates an infamous exemplar of "improper" English! - you were able to respond (sort of) appropriately, instead of throwing a fatal error and having to be rebooted.

Bonus round: all of this was in "support" of your thesis:
TwoPiece wrote:"backronyms" are based off WORDS. If "bae" is not a real word then "BAE" cannot be a "backronym" (which is also not a real word).
As BaconWise pointed out, if being in the Oxford English Dictionary isn't sufficient to convince you that bae and backronym are "real" English words, then it's difficult to imagine what external authority you are referencing in making these determinations. Cite your sources or gtfo.
You should've stopped after your second sentence, since there's no reason for me to consider reading this blog. Especially since you seemingly believe there is no authority to determine language (yikes). At that point, it's entirely inconsequential to even have a discussion, as I expect you'd infer whatever you'd like to believe, rather than understand, from what I'm saying. You have zero authority to tell me to leave. :lol: :lol:

Edit: It's also cute how you attempt to use "coined" words as an excuse for some gibberish slang nonsense. Clearly not the same thing. "Internet" was an idea. "Bae" is a 3-letter slang term, or BAE for acronym, to shorten a word by 25% (or, in the case of the acronym, turn it into something that isn't 100% retarded).

Re: Last person to post wins. . . . .

Posted: Thu May 16, 2019 11:44 am
by theCapraAegagrus
shiroo56 wrote:In a more important note. What does the “(wap)” behind some titles mean?
What, exactly, is your question in reference to? Topics here at UC?

Re: Last person to post wins. . . . . (wap)

Posted: Thu May 16, 2019 11:48 am
by Harvonsgard
Not topics but replies. Behind some replies in the top line (where it normally says:”Re: ... thread title”) there is a (wap)?

EDIT: Just like on this post :D

Re: Last person to post wins. . . . . (wap)

Posted: Thu May 16, 2019 11:49 am
by theCapraAegagrus
shiroo56 wrote:Not topics but replies. Behind some replies in to top line (where it normally says:”Re: ... thread title”) there is a (wap)?
It says it on this one that I'm replying to...

I have no clue.