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boy all jamie really needed is scott to make her feet better .
Scott you lucky bastard.
How can Jamie he comfortable with Scott’s raging boner pressed against the back of her neck? Just kidding but I know mine would.
Aww…
scott will be the in hour increasingly interested for jamie.and estrogen jamie confused head
Scott I’m starting to feel better but I think I’m starting to like you why do you have to be with barb I could make you happier if I was your girlfriend …. Looking at scott with sad eyes ….. Leans in and kisses him …..
I tend not to leave comments as I just like to follow the story on a daily basis but I had to ask why people seem to feel the need to pick up on grammar all the time, just enjoy the artwork guys and stop moaning about text. Oh and I apologise if I’ve made errors in this comment… NOT! Nice work by the way SF
We’re paying for it. You can’t have a “Don’t nitpick the small stuff” attitude when you charge for something. That’s just poor business sense. Artists like their work to have as few flaws as possible. Professional writers PAY people to point out spelling and grammar mistakes. It’s good for everyone. Even if it were free, it’d still be good to point out errors because errors make you look bad as an artist, and nobody wants that.
I agree with you.
Past tense of creep would make no sense. Present tense applies, as in “are you sure you aren’t creeping out?” But whom talks grammatically correct anyways.
“Creeped out” is actually a tenseless idiom. You can use it in present tense (“I’m feeling totally creeped out right now!”) or past (“That scary monster totally creeped me out last night!”), and both are equally valid.
Past tense is correct here. It makes sense to say “are you sure you aren’t creeped out” In the same way you might ask someone, “are you sure you aren’t frightened?” Turn the question into a declarative statement “you are creeped out,” like “you are frightened” is a completed continuous state.