"It's" means "it is" or "it has." Literally translated (and you asked me to be pedantic), you said "Then don't ask me what it is meaning is." What the hell does that mean? Like I said, you asked me to be pedantic.
Next time, try being pedantic and asking the question you what an answer to instead of asking a different one and getting fussy when I can't read your mind. The perfect situation is for the both parents to work on the marriage to keep an intact family for the kids.
And keep the wife barefoot and pregnant in the kitchen where she belongs?
Again, try being pedantic and just stick to the information on the posts. You keep making things up and it makes your ramblings hard to follow.
LOL...that's rich coming from you. You can't even tell the difference between the possessive case of a pronoun and subject/verb contraction. FYI, they taught that in elementary school.
Yes I see now. I didn't need the apostrophe in the "its". Thanks for squaring away my punctuation. You may be of some use after all.
"And keep the wife barefoot and pregnant in the kitchen where she belongs?"
Did you want an answer to this or are you just baiting?
"LOL...that's rich coming from you. You can't even tell the difference between the possessive case of a pronoun and subject/verb contraction. FYI, they taught that in elementary school.
Yes, yes, you caught my extra apostrophe. But I never claimed to be pedantic. So, how is that rich?
Do you think it's wrong for a women to be barefoot and pregnant in the kitchen? If so, why?