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Verbs, Adjectives, and Nouns
By Singapore Man of Leisure  •  November 25, 2014
The joy of blogging for me is the scintillating engagement with readers. It's a two way street. It's the adjective silly! Never the noun. When I wrote the above post, I was feeling  quite smug until a girl with the cutest dimples put me in my place at another post months later: "Without the verb, how do you get the adjective?" Her comment showed she had a deeper understanding than me. She is right. Without the action to verify, how do we make an assessment to derive the adjective? When someone says "Stop speculation", it's a loaded statement based on bias. Which rendered it quite meaningless for its not advice but accusation... As if investing is always the right thing to do? For all people? In all circumstances? Just ask those people we know who lost money "investing". Again it's the adjective that matters - whether you are good at or lousy at what you do. And that adjective comes from your past actions and track record. If you are wondering should you continue what you are currently doing, who else better to remove the bell round your neck than the same person who tied it there in the first place?
Singapore Man of Leisure (welcome to my blog; just google it!)
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By Singapore Man of Leisure
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