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"been developed"? *facepalm
Sorry about my shitty English, no es mi idioma principal pero podemos hablar perfectamente en español si gustas 😉😉
No hablo español. Perdona que me molestara el problema gramatical. No era mi intención ser ofensivo de ninguna manera.
The thing is that "been developed" strongly implies that there was an active and intentional developing (inventing) of it. Sadly there are many people that do pose such questions, purposely framed in that manner. So I suppose i reacted based on a misunderstanding of that meaning. Cheers and be well :)
Oh, now I understand — it was my fault, sorry. I’ve never been in any English-speaking country directly, so I don’t really know how words are used when you’re a native English speaker. In Spanish, we say “desarrollar” (“to develop”) not only when there’s an intentional action, but also, for example, when people get sick or have a condition — we say they “developed” the illness. In the case of autism, I understand that generally people are, let’s say, “normal” until a certain age, and it’s then that autism “develops,” so to speak.You don’t have to apologize at all.
I’m not bothered or anything. It’s just that my English is really bad sometimes, for that reason.
hey cheers for the message.
i dont think your english was really bad. perhaps more that there was a slightly unusual grammar employed and because english itself is so messy and confusing, that i misunderstood. also, my english language abilities arent fantastic or normal anyway, even though its my fist language.
in english we also say that people "developed" an illness, its more about exact tense. So "has been developed" just sounded a bit awkward and made me think you meant the condition itself, and not the study of it.
anyway long story short, english itself sucks and is quite prone to misunderstandings. thanks for conversing in good faith. :)