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Quote from "Chaosdragon94" »Holy shit. I am. Sweet,
Whitehouse.gov: He became the first Governor in Texas history to be elected to consecutive 4-year terms when he was re-elected on November 3, 1998.
Quote from "darkjay" »Actually their is nothing wrong with the use of to in that sentence to be elected to consecutive four year terms.
I think google rigged its engine to come up with the results it does.
P.S. - I don't give a flying fuck if this is old.
"Cards and flowers on your window, your friends all plead for you to stay,
sometimes beginnings aren't so simple, sometimes goodbye's the only way."
you can also type in miserable failure
"Cards and flowers on your window, your friends all plead for you to stay,
sometimes beginnings aren't so simple, sometimes goodbye's the only way."
"Cards and flowers on your window, your friends all plead for you to stay,
sometimes beginnings aren't so simple, sometimes goodbye's the only way."
Damn right you are
french military victories
take the time and read it, its a good read lol
I found that when looking at a link on the page that Equionox linked.
Notice it says to instead of two? Man, even his freaking website is as smart as he is!!
Elected to consecutive four year terms? So to can substitute for two now?... When did this happen? o.O
Like I said, two would actually be wrong there.
to be Elected two consecutive 4 year terms
to be elected to consecutive 4 year terms
ok nevermind it could work either way.
Am I missing something?...