Stupid Q I need the answer to

<p>when columbia asks you to upload your “express yourself essay”, should it be double-spaced?</p>

<p>hm… I didn’t give that any thought. I didn’t double space.</p>

<p>If you don’t, you can put more stuff and impress them… yeah!</p>

<p>be nice to the reader and 1.5 space it at least</p>

<p>

I spy with my little eye … a preposition at the end.</p>

<p>I once heard it was a chicago thing to ad a preposition to the end of a sentance? is that true? I always do… “are you coming with” “where are you going to”</p>

<p>1) “Are you coming with” isn’t really an instance where the grammar can be fixed by putting the preposition in the beginning of the phrase (like “stupid question to which I need the answer”). It’s just the phrase “Are you coming with us” but without the “us” at the end.</p>

<p>2) “Where are you going to” can be easily fixed by dropping the “to”. “Where are you going” makes perfect sense. </p>

<p>:) I’m not trying to be a grammar nazi, I’m just really bored on New Year’s Eve, waiting for my significant other to get off of work.</p>

<p>On behalf of everyone involved with this thread…</p>

<p>Shut up, R!ck.</p>

<p>Hahahaha. I already told you, it doesn’t annoy me …</p>

<p>(How’d I know you’d respond to this thread? :))</p>

<p>Well I see we’re making good use of our knowledge and really helping people with our responses.</p>

<p>Well, if you refer to your question as stupid in the thread’s title, I don’t think you should expect much from the responses. If it were “I discovered a fundamental flaw in physics and I need help resolving it or else all of the achievements of mankind in the past several hundred years will be proven false” I probably would have thought about my answer a bit more. Instead, it was “Stupid Q I need the answer to”. Stupid questions illicit stupid responses.</p>

<p>fair enough</p>