1. A question with no significance.
2. A question with an obvious answer.
“Bro so yesterday night-“
“Wait when?”
“Bro you ask them kenneth questions”
annotate the text from the legendary harvey lathburys famous book ‘shakespeare doesn’t even rhyme’
‘i was shook’th when i saw that bumbaclart bad man walk through the door with that vigorous tone’ said half willy will, ‘ i thought he was gonna cum in me’
tyler’s the best at payday
tyler’s the best at payday
tyler’s the best at payday
tyler’s the best at payday
tyler’s the best at payday
tyler’s the best at payday
tyler’s the best at payday
tyler’s the best at payday
tyler’s the best at payday
tyler’s the best at payday
tyler’s the best at payday
tyler’s the best at payday
tyler’s the best at payday
tyler’s the best at payday
and fortnite
and rocket league
and fifa
and gta
and suck your mom
harvey lathburys exam questions are aids
“harvey lathburys exam questions are shocking
Also known as non causa pro causa (non cause for cause/not a cause for a cause) or false cause fallacy
A logical fallacy in which a cause is wrongly defined
Here's the exhaustive list of Questionable Cause Fallacy:
1. Post ergo propter hoc
2. Correlation means causation
3. Texas Sharpshooter
4. Circular cause and consequence
5. Singular cause fallacy
6. Regression fallacy
7. Jumping into conclusions
8. Association fallacy (guilt/honor by association, such as reductio ad Hitlerum/Godwin's Law, reductio ad Stalinum/red-tag/red-bait) {Association Fallacy is an illegitimate child between ad hominem and questionable cause fallacy/false cause fallacy/non causa pro causa}
When you force someone to repeat the question you were just asked. Using "it slipped my mind" as an excuse.
Gina: *asks question*
Ellie: *was tuned out* could you repeat the question?
Gina: ...
Ellie: I heard you, but it slipped my mind
Gina: yeah of course!
Jane: *in corner* sus
When your Bestie asks you a question and makes the subject plural in the sentence. You don't know how to respond to this so you simply say "Plural Question Mark?" to express confusion and loss of words.
When you write a question and its not accepted.
Darn! Why was my question denied again?
1: A question of great importance
2: A topic of great debate at the moment
The Burning question : are mandated constitutionally legal?