Military, Intelligence, Progressive, and Conservative are all nouns. Not sure where you are going with this. I think what you mean is these words can be a noun adjunct.
I totally get everyone is on a spectrum. Thank you for pointing that out.
When someone says they are a progressive conservative what they mean is they are a conservative who is embarrassed by the garbage conservatives push out. They are not progressive because a progressive is the opposite of a conservative.
Progressive want change, conservatives do not. So you are essentially saying you are someone who doesn’t want change that wants change. It is nonsensical.
Please stop it with pretending you have English language mastery.
Not in the context in which we’re discussing, they’re not.
The Liberal Party of Canada (not “The Party of Liberals”)
The Conservative Party of Canada (not “The Party of Conservatives”)
The New Democratic Party of Canada (not “The Party of New Democrats”)
and then back in the early 90’s,
The Progressive Conservative Party of Canada (not “The Party of Progressive Conservatives”…which, FYI…THAT would be the oxymoron by definition that you are trying to argue.)
In the context of party names, which is precisely what we are discussing, these words are adjectives.
Which brings me all the way back around to “The Socially Progressive Fiscally Conservative Party of Canada” being too long to fit on a sign, and so it’s shortened to just Progressive Conservative. Which YOU seem to think means that Progressive is being used as an adjective for Conservative, which yes…WOULD be an oxymoron if that was how the words were used in the party name.
But…they’re…not… They are two adjectives describing two separate things (Fiscal policy & social policy)
You want to talk about English competency? How is the difference between adjective and noun and when to use each so difficult for you to grasp?
Good lord. I’m done. I tried being respectful, but you’re beyond hopeless.
They are all nouns, not sure why you would bother to deny this.
I can’t help that a party shortens their name to an oxymoron. That doesn’t change the fact that it is.
Thanks for the history lesson. I had look up these Tory wanna-be losers. Once again they are just embarrassed conservatives who are progressives in name only. Is that your big point? Because I don’t think you have proved anything contrary to what I have said.
The fact that you don’t know a noun can become an adjective is kind of telling. I agree we are done here. Cheers!
Military, Intelligence, Progressive, and Conservative are all nouns. Not sure where you are going with this. I think what you mean is these words can be a noun adjunct.
I totally get everyone is on a spectrum. Thank you for pointing that out.
When someone says they are a progressive conservative what they mean is they are a conservative who is embarrassed by the garbage conservatives push out. They are not progressive because a progressive is the opposite of a conservative.
Progressive want change, conservatives do not. So you are essentially saying you are someone who doesn’t want change that wants change. It is nonsensical.
Please stop it with pretending you have English language mastery.
Not in the context in which we’re discussing, they’re not.
and then back in the early 90’s,
In the context of party names, which is precisely what we are discussing, these words are adjectives.
Which brings me all the way back around to “The Socially Progressive Fiscally Conservative Party of Canada” being too long to fit on a sign, and so it’s shortened to just Progressive Conservative. Which YOU seem to think means that Progressive is being used as an adjective for Conservative, which yes…WOULD be an oxymoron if that was how the words were used in the party name.
But…they’re…not… They are two adjectives describing two separate things (Fiscal policy & social policy)
You want to talk about English competency? How is the difference between adjective and noun and when to use each so difficult for you to grasp?
Good lord. I’m done. I tried being respectful, but you’re beyond hopeless.
They are all nouns, not sure why you would bother to deny this.
I can’t help that a party shortens their name to an oxymoron. That doesn’t change the fact that it is.
Thanks for the history lesson. I had look up these Tory wanna-be losers. Once again they are just embarrassed conservatives who are progressives in name only. Is that your big point? Because I don’t think you have proved anything contrary to what I have said.
The fact that you don’t know a noun can become an adjective is kind of telling. I agree we are done here. Cheers!
Fucking bots caught in a loop again.
Yes, it did feel that way. I am wondering if people are replying with AI. Either that or they are just fucking stupid.