Chuck Riggs wrote: Maria C. wrote: Alan Jones wrote: If you could turn back time, you would be turned back with it and would not foresee the folly of what he was about to do, any more than you did the first time round. There is no evidence of that, is there? Besides, when we think of turning time back in order to correct something, we're likely to assume
On Wed, 9 Jul 2008 16:47:15 +0100, "Alan Jones" <atj@blueyonder.co.uk> wrote: "Chuck Riggs" <chriggs@eircom.net> wrote in message news:dtg974dnqnq4ejj0jnr32jtbnmkcveru6d@4ax.com... On Tue, 8 Jul 2008 05:02:12 -0700 (PDT), Marius Hancu <Marius.Hancu@gmail.com> wrote: On Jul 7, 10:48 am, R J Valentine <r...@TheWorld.com> wrote: }> If I could turn back time, I would
"Chuck Riggs" <chriggs@eircom.net> wrote in message news:dtg974dnqnq4ejj0jnr32jtbnmkcveru6d@4ax.com... On Tue, 8 Jul 2008 05:02:12 -0700 (PDT), Marius Hancu <Marius.Hancu@gmail.com> wrote: On Jul 7, 10:48 am, R J Valentine <r...@TheWorld.com> wrote: }> If I could turn back time, I would stop him. This doesn't really make sense to me if we look at the tenses, so there's
On Tue, 8 Jul 2008 05:02:12 -0700 (PDT) Marius Hancu <Marius.Hancu@gmail.com> wrote: } On Jul 7, 10:48 am, R J Valentine <r...@TheWorld.com> wrote: } }> }> If I could turn back time, I would stop him. I didn't say that. Ray, the original poster, did (presumably quoting a homework assignment or something. What I said was how to make sense of it, considering the tenses, given that the