| bio | website | |
|---|---|---|
| location | Lititz, PA | |
| age | 18 | |
| visits | member for | 2 years, 9 months |
| seen | Feb 14 at 13:09 | |
| stats | profile views | 144 |
I like programming, astronomy, history, language, and music.
The reason there is so much suffering in the world is because our first parents disobeyed God. Yes, there is a God, and no it is not his fault. God made the earth very good, and then gave us dominion over it. We handed it over to the devil when we disobeyed God, and things began to go down hill. Nevertheless, God immediately promised that a man would be born who would take away the sins of the world. That man was Jesus Christ, God's son. He came to earth, lived a perfect life, and then allowed himself to be executed as a criminal. In doing so, he paid the penalty for sin, which is death, for those who believe in him. Three days after he was killed, he rose from the dead, enslaving death! Then he went back to heaven.
Come unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn of me for I am meek and lowly in heart and ye shall find rest unto your soul. For my yoke is easy and my burden is light.
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Feb 14 |
comment |
Does a gerund always end with -ing? If so, why? A past participle isn't necessarily a gerund, the two are brothers but the one isn't a subset of the other. |
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Feb 11 |
awarded | Popular Question |
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Feb 5 |
awarded | Notable Question |
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Jan 1 |
answered | Is “blah blah blah” the most common spelling? |
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Jan 1 |
comment |
Synonym for “engrooved” @Synhelp, I've edited my answer. "Broken in" is the closest thing I can think of. It basically has that idea. |
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Jan 1 |
revised |
Synonym for “engrooved” added 107 characters in body |
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Jan 1 |
revised |
Synonym for “engrooved” added 107 characters in body |
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Jan 1 |
comment |
“May I know your good name?” Yeah, definitely :) |
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Jan 1 |
answered | “May I know your good name?” |
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Jan 1 |
answered | Synonym for “engrooved” |
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Jan 1 |
asked | “pre-” and “post-”, but what about “suf-”? |
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Jan 1 |
asked | Difference among “dis-”, “de-”, & “un-” |
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Dec 22 |
accepted | Etymology of “history” and why the “hi-” prefix? |
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Dec 22 |
awarded | Nice Question |
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Dec 22 |
comment |
Etymology of “history” and why the “hi-” prefix? Sorry, here's a link to the Google Dictionary. Story: goo.gl/60Nhl, History: goo.gl/uO8Nz |
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Dec 22 |
comment |
Etymology of “history” and why the “hi-” prefix? Story = fictional narrative? According to Google, a story is an account of something (real, imagined, or false), whereas history is the events behind a story. War stories are history, but war history is not stories, it is hate, blood, and killing (with a few exceptions). |
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Dec 21 |
asked | Etymology of “history” and why the “hi-” prefix? |
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Nov 13 |
comment |
Does a gerund always end with -ing? If so, why? Excellent! Well answered. |
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Nov 13 |
accepted | Does a gerund always end with -ing? If so, why? |
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Nov 13 |
comment |
Does a gerund always end with -ing? If so, why? As this only answers the bounty question, not my original question, I won't mark it as the accepted answer (not sure if I still can either), but +1 for the detailed answer. |