Well that really begs the question.
Is a non sequitur that you shoe-horned in to a post about misused words.
When asked what you were talking about you appear to have Googled the phrase to see what it actualy meant.
You don't know what you're talking about, but you're saying stuff anyway. Misused. Misunderstood. Dumb guy reads shit and says shit and does not realize that he's babbling stupidity
Oh, geez. I originally made the comment. I explained to you how it was relevant. I explained it. I made cryptic jokes before I finally broke down and explained it to you. Now it was explained to you, and you say I googled it? How would I actually make the comment in the first place if I had to google it afterward, dumbshit? Some of us actually spent time acquiring higher education degrees. And some of us actually read and learned things. I would never accuse you of that, Jr.
And oh, my fucking god, I just saw it! You googled "beg the question," and you wound up someplace that had another phrase, "non sequitur" and you actually used it while accusing me of being as pathetic and fraudulent as you. Love it.
Okay, this is getting more than tiresome:
The title of the post was, "The most common words people misuse."
My statement above was, "'Beg the question' is a very commonly misused phrase in modern American English vernacular."
After several comment exchanges and the kind of explanation most appropriate to a pre-adolescent child who's curious about things people say in books and stuff, do you still not understand?
"Begs the question" is commonly misused. The post is about commonly misused words. Commonly misused. Like, dumb guys don't understand, then act smart by misusing them. Get it? Misused. Wielded wrongly in common speech. You don't know what you're talking about, but you're saying stuff anyway. Misused. Misunderstood. Dumb guy reads shit and says shit and does not realize that he's babbling stupidity. He says something "begs the question" when he actually means it makes him wonder about something.