View Full Version : Consent
palani
25th November 2015, 06:06 AM
Noun:
noun (n.)
late 14c., from Anglo-French noun "name, noun," from Old French nom, non (Modern French nom), from Latin nomen "name, noun" (see name (n.)). Old English used name to mean "noun." Related: Nounal.
Verb:
verb (n.)
late 14c., from Old French verbe "word; word of God; saying; part of speech that expresses action or being" (12c.) and directly from Latin verbum "verb," originally "a word," from PIE root *were- (3) "to speak" (cognates: Avestan urvata- "command;" Sanskrit vrata- "command, vow;" Greek rhetor "public speaker," rhetra "agreement, covenant," eirein "to speak, say;" Hittite weriga- "call, summon;" Lithuanian vardas "name;" Gothic waurd, Old English word "word").
They are both words but a noun expresses the name of something real (tree, rock, house, bird) while the verb expresses some type of action (the rock moves, the bird flies).
Consent is an action. It is a verb.
consent verb con·sent \kən-ˈsent\
: to agree to do or allow something : to give permission for something to happen or be done
intransitive verb
1
: to give assent or approval : agree <consent to being tested>
2
archaic : to be in concord in opinion or sentiment
Consent may also be a noun
consent noun /kənˈsent/
; NAmE /kənˈsent/
[uncountable] consent (to something) permission to do something, especially given by somebody in authority Children under 16 cannot give consent to medical treatment. The written consent of a parent is required. to refuse/withhold your consent He is charged with taking a car without the owner's consent. see also age of consent
[uncountable] agreement about something She was chosen as leader by common consent (= everyone agreed to the choice). By mutual consent they didn't go out (= they both agreed not to).
[countable] an official document giving permission for something
Consent as a noun is a thing.
Somehow your action of consent (as a verb) is getting translated over to some physical item with the name of your consent attached to that thing. Can you think of what you might have done that would label some physical item to be created as a noun (with a name) that might be interpreted as a consent?
This alchemy (conversion of an action to a noun) is what is causing 99.8% of your problems.
What action can you take that allows you to show that your consent is NOT a noun?
Spectrism
25th November 2015, 06:53 AM
This is plain stupid.
Some words are nouns or verbs depending on the context.
Drive. I drive a car. I drive golf balls downrange with a wood.
Drive. We went for a country drive. The ranchers started the cattle drive.
Don't take serious issues and turn them into stupid word games.
palani
25th November 2015, 07:03 AM
stupid word games.
You have no complaint ... so why complain?
You are where you are by the law of your being. I can live with that.
Spectrism
25th November 2015, 08:42 AM
You have no complaint ... so why complain?
You are where you are by the law of your being. I can live with that.
You fabricate in your mind the pile of horseshit in which you play.
palani
25th November 2015, 08:44 AM
I fabricate in MY mind the pile of horseshit in which YOU play.
Back at you ole son.
mick silver
25th November 2015, 09:08 AM
http://www.thedailybell.com/images/library/confusedeconomist.jpg (http://www.thedailybell.com/news-analysis/36658/Dysfunction-at-the-Fed/)
7th trump
25th November 2015, 10:21 AM
You fabricate in your mind the pile of horseshit in which you play.
Quoted for truth.
And the GSUS horse fly's like the taste.
Spectrism
25th November 2015, 11:31 AM
It saddens me that on a serious topic someone would totally detract from the subject by playing stupid games. And when one has so little handle on the native language, it is a bit frightening.
palani
25th November 2015, 03:56 PM
A pre-adult does not have the legal capacity to convert a verb verb into a noun verb. Reflect on this a bit. Evidently the alchemy required to do this little bit of magic requires the ability to engage in a contract or in contract behavior.
The same then holds true for a woman under coverture. In this mode of marriage the woman lacks the ability to engage in contracts or contract behavior. Consent is virtually synonymous with contract. Can't contract? Then you cannot consent.
While we are on the lack of ability to contract I might as well include Spectrism and 7th_bugle ... seems no one wants to contract with idiots either. They cannot comprehend the concept of being responsible. This is why these individuals may be found in rubber lined rooms with canvas shirts.
Spectrism
25th November 2015, 04:08 PM
hey palani- don't blame me if you are unable to communicate a cogent idea. It is in your communication skills that your issue lies, if, there is a real message. Instead of muddling a concept with slime, seek to write to an audience / reader who will be able to digest what you offer. Smacking people with unnecessary or unfounded quaint-isms won't win you any points.
palani
25th November 2015, 04:12 PM
don't blame me
You will never find me attempting to place blame on any idiot. That would be against my policy.
palani
27th November 2015, 04:31 AM
Conjugating a verb creates a different person.
Verb conjugation refers to how a verb changes to show a different person, tense, number or mood. In English, we have 6 different persons : first person singular (I), second person singular (you), third person singular (he/she/it/one), first person plural (we), second person plural (you) and third person plural (they).
Learn to conjugate (or rather how NOT to conjugate) and control your person(s) a little better.
Spectrism
27th November 2015, 05:59 AM
Conjugating a verb creates a different person.
Learn to conjugate (or rather how NOT to conjugate) and control your person(s) a little better.
A noun that has the roots of the same tree as a verb is not an attempted conjugation change. It is a separate and distinct word.
I run along the path. I went for a run.
In the first case, we have a verb: run. It is an action verb describing what I am doing. In the second sentence we have a noun: run. It is the thing that I engaged in. A noun is a person, place or thing.
Maybe you need to get your person out of your ass so you can see straightly the light of day.
palani
27th November 2015, 07:00 AM
I run along the path.
Why did you run? Was someone chasing you? Had you committed a crime? Were you properly licensed to run?
I went for a run.
Now you are providing third party evidence.
Prosecutor: "Where were you at the time of the crime?"
Spectrism: "I went for a run."
The one providing the evidence does so in third party form.
Consider TRESPASS (as in NO TRESPASS notice).
Frequently this is written NO TRESPASSING as in the third party past tense, a verb converted to a noun. Why do you believe this dictionary excerpt is backward?
tres·pass
ˈtrespəs,ˈtresˌpas/
verb
verb: trespass; 3rd person present: trespasses; past tense: trespassed; past participle: trespassed; gerund or present participle: trespassing
1.
enter the owner's land or property without permission.
"there is no excuse for trespassing on railroad property"
synonyms: intrude on, encroach on, enter without permission, invade
"there is no excuse for trespassing on railroad property"
make unfair claims on or take advantage of (something).
"she really must not trespass on his hospitality"
synonyms: take advantage of, impose on, play on, exploit, abuse; More
encroach on, infringe on
"I must not trespass on your good nature"
2.
archaicliterary
commit an offense against (a person or a set of rules).
"a man who had trespassed against Judaic law"
synonyms: sin, transgress, offend, do wrong, err, go astray, fall from grace, stray from the straight and narrow
"he would be the last among us to trespass"
noun
noun: trespass; plural noun: trespasses
1.
Law
entry to a person's land or property without their permission.
"the defendants were guilty of trespass"
synonyms: unlawful entry, intrusion, encroachment, invasion
"his alleged trespass on private land"
2.
archaicliterary
a sin; an offense.
"the worst trespass against the goddess Venus is to see her naked and asleep"
synonyms: sin, wrong, wrongdoing, transgression, crime, offense, misdeed, misdemeanor, error, lapse, fall from grace
"he asked forgiveness for his trespasses"
palani
27th November 2015, 08:40 AM
Are YOU licensed to conjugate a verb?
Think about THAT a bit.
7th trump
27th November 2015, 12:38 PM
Spec
You do realize "what" or who you are talking with right?
Palani has more issues than "news week".
The more you try and correct him the more you'll come to terms that hes delusional and believes in conspiracy than the truth. He loves confusion!
palani
27th November 2015, 01:57 PM
The more you try and correct him
There is an element of truth in everything I write. Not the WHOLE truth mind you. Nobody really knows that. But enough truth to raise an element of doubt and put you on notice to inquire.
If you choose not to inquire then wherein lies your complaint?
If you choose to concentrate on the portion that might not be the ENTIRE truth rather than concentrating on that speck that holds a portion of the truth then you will miss out on much of what life has to offer.
Spectrism
27th November 2015, 04:41 PM
palani is as looney as hypertiger
7th trump
27th November 2015, 05:47 PM
Just ran across this on facebook.
"Never argue with someone who believes their own lies".
How fitting.
Shami-Amourae
27th November 2015, 05:53 PM
Just ran across this on facebook.
"Never argue with someone who believes their own lies".
How fitting.
It's better to just troll the fuck out of them.
Make them angry, and make them discredit themselves.
I find myself having to do this more and more since I come from a politically incorrect position. The more politically incorrect you are, the closer to the truth you are, since the people in power make it incorrect to be correct.
palani
27th November 2015, 05:59 PM
... as looney as hypertiger
Again ... POLICY ... never argue with an idiot.
palani
27th November 2015, 06:00 PM
"Never argue with someone who believes their own lies"
However, it can be shorted to NEVER ARGUE period.
But I don't expect you to grock that either.
palani
27th November 2015, 06:02 PM
It's better to just troll
How's the porn business?
Shami-Amourae
27th November 2015, 06:02 PM
How's the porn business?
I ran over some hookers and stole their money in GTA5.
Cebu_4_2
27th November 2015, 06:18 PM
I ran over some hookers and stole their money in GTA5.
I like hookers, I came in an Escort a few times...
http://www.ctcautoranch.com/Parts%20Cars/Ford/Ford%20Small%20Size/Ford%20Small%20Size/1989%20Ford%20Escort%20LX%201/1989%20Ford%20Escort%20LX%201%202.JPG
govcheetos
27th November 2015, 06:45 PM
I ran over some hookers and stole their money in GTA5.
You should try harder to support businesses that deal in cash.
palani
27th November 2015, 06:52 PM
You should try harder to support businesses that deal in cash.
That doesn't seem to have worked too well for Charlie Sheen.
govcheetos
27th November 2015, 06:56 PM
That doesn't seem to have worked too well for Charlie Sheen.
Support doesn't mean frequent.
palani
27th November 2015, 06:58 PM
Support doesn't mean frequent.
A safety director I once worked with had a saying "given the frequency the severity will follow"
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