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Post by PreachCaleb on Apr 20, 2017 18:43:04 GMT
Actually, no. It could also mean it's something she said in a previous sentence that was moved around to provide a better understanding. And the writer didn't feel like transcribing the previous sentence. Ex. "I've never liked celery. I think it just tastes nasty." Becomes: "I think [celery] just tastes nasty. Or it could also mean it's something that was in the question, but the responder didn't actually say it. So the writer put it in to clarify what they were talking about. Ex. Interviewer: "Do you like celery?" Responder: "I think it just tastes nasty." In the article, once again becomes: "I think [celery] just tastes nasty. So, in conclusion, none of what you've posted means they're delusional. That's not what that word means. Another dumb excuse by a dumb MCU fan. Nobody says "I think just tastes nasty." They would say either "I think celery just tastes nasty" or "I think it just tastes nasty". In either case, it can be transcribed word-for-word and the reader would know that they were referring to celery (or to something mentioned in a previous question)"
When they say first female villain or first female superhero in a solo movie without qualifying it as within Marvel, then the brackets are only the transcriber's best guess or assumption as to what they said but isn't actually what they said. They didn't qualify it as within Marvel. So they were either delusional or intentionally trying to mislead people.
Lol. You didn't actually read what I wrote, did you? No wonder you're confused. Please look up and read all the words I type. And re-read the quotes with all the context. Thor is specifically mentioned. So yes, it is qualified.
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