Musk Mulls Sending All Americans $5,000 Checks Using DOGE Savings

Poor Earl. He still hasn't realized that by using Spanish words he will be subject to arrest and deportation. <--- sarcasm
Were there Spanish words in my post, Pobre?

My post…’those polysyllabic words confuse Pobre.’

Not much Spanish there.

You need to try harder not to suck, Pobre.

And,,,learn what the word ‘sarcasm” means…Pobre.

Poor Pobre.
[/QUOTE]
Yes. There would be Spanish words in your post. Good luck trying to tell ICE that you didn't use any Spanish words.
 
Were there Spanish words in my post, Pobre?

My post…’those polysyllabic words confuse Pobre.’

Not much Spanish there.

You need to try harder not to suck, Pobre.

And,,,learn what the word ‘sarcasm” means…Pobre.

Poor Pobre.
Yes. There would be Spanish words in your post. Good luck trying to tell ICE that you didn't use any Spanish words.
[/QUOTE]
I didn’t use Spanish in your post that I replied to, Pobre.

Would you care to have Diogenes tutor you further on the meaning and usage of “sarcasm,” Pobre?

Would you care to become bi-lingual, Pobre?

I can help you learn Spanish, it’s not difficult.

Adjectives follow nouns, not precede them as in English.

Verbs are conjugated at the ending of the verb.

“I” is pronounced as ”e” and “e” is pronounced as “a.”

Reflexive verbs and irregular verbs are a bitch to learn to conjugate.

There are many expressions that do not translate figuratively, ie. ‘de vez en cuando.” ( in time in when)

It means, from time to time.

See, it’s easy. After you learn the usage of “slander,” we can continue with your Spanish lessons, Pobre.

De nada (it was nothing) Pobre.
 
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Pobre:


President Trump loves Hispanics.

President Donald J. Trump's America First Policies are ...​

1740173396114.png
National Archives (.gov)
https://trumpwhitehouse.archives.gov › president-donal...




Jul 9, 2020 — Since 2016, nearly 611,000 Hispanic Americans have been lifted out of poverty. Under the Administration's pro-growth policies, median income for Hispanic households reached a historic
 
Pobre…”Poor Earl. He still hasn't realized that by using Spanish words he will be subject to arrest and deportation. <--- sarcasm

Pobre, here is the correct notation for sarcasm:

“The equivalent for an ironic or sarcastic statement would be a bracketed exclamation mark, e.g., " Oh, really[!] ".

Poor Pobre…no sarcasm.
 
I didn’t use Spanish in your post that I replied to, Pobre.

Would you care to have Diogenes tutor you further on the meaning and usage of “sarcasm,” Pobre?

Would you care to become bi-lingual, Pobre?

I can help you learn Spanish, it’s not difficult.

Adjectives follow nouns, not precede them as in English.

Verbs are conjugated at the ending of the verb.

“I” is pronounced as ”e” and “e” is pronounced as “a.”

Reflexive verbs and irregular verbs are a bitch to learn to conjugate.

There are many expressions that do not translate figuratively, ie. ‘de vez en cuando.” ( in time in when)

It means, from time to time.

See, it’s easy. After you learn the usage of “slander,” we can continue with your Spanish lessons, Pobre.

De nada (it was nothing) Pobre.
Here is the post of yours that I responded to. I took out the extra end quote to make the words clearly yours since they were yours.

You are so dumb, for Musk and Trump didn't lie---they use sarcasm (like I do) to get you Marxist fools bent out of shape.

Those polysyllabic words confuse Pobre.

Poor Pobre.
But keep on showing us how smart you are, Earl. It is doing wonders for you. <--- sarcasm
 
Pobre…”Poor Earl. He still hasn't realized that by using Spanish words he will be subject to arrest and deportation. <--- sarcasm

Pobre, here is the correct notation for sarcasm:

“The equivalent for an ironic or sarcastic statement would be a bracketed exclamation mark, e.g., " Oh, really[!] ".

Poor Pobre…no sarcasm.
Poor Earl. Determined to show us how smart he really is.
 
Pobre…”Poor Earl. He still hasn't realized that by using Spanish words he will be subject to arrest and deportation. <--- sarcasm

Pobre, here is the correct notation for sarcasm:

“The equivalent for an ironic or sarcastic statement would be a bracketed exclamation mark, e.g., " Oh, really[!] ".

Poor Pobre…no sarcasm.
By the way Earl, you really should try reading things before you believe them to be true.

https://www.wikiwand.com/

Written text, in English and other languages,
lacks a standard way to mark irony, and several forms of punctuation have been proposed to fill the gap.
 
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