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I sometimes wonder if people actually try spell that bad... typos happen its true... but when your ebay add looks like it was written by a 1st grader...
I sometimes wonder if people actually try spell that bad... typos happen its true... but when your ebay add looks like it was written by a 1st grader...
That is a nice truck, and probably worth the current bid but who knows what this seller set the reserve at. He seems awful proud of the thing. And yes, I agree. The atrocious spelling is a red flag, as is the caps lock. And why waste space informing potential buyers what a new F350 CCLB 4x4 costs when you don't even state the odometer reading of the truck you are selling? Stinks of ignorance and arrogance, but hey, it is a very clean nice truck.
That is a nice truck, and probably worth the current bid but who knows what this seller set the reserve at. He seems awful proud of the thing. And yes, I agree. The atrocious spelling is a red flag, as is the caps lock. And why waste space informing potential buyers what a new F350 CCLB 4x4 costs when you don't even state the odometer reading of the truck you are selling? Stinks of ignorance and arrogance, but hey, it is a very clean nice truck.
Indeed, it stinks of ignorance. I never buy from anyone who sells on Ebay or Craigslist if they can't spell. They are almost always using their typos to mask something that is wrong with the vehicle. Rarely do I ever meet the seller and say to myself, "Wow, he really is that stupid." Instead, I meet two types of people who misspell on online ads: 1.) dudes with ipads/smartphones/laptops that know how to spell (scammers) and 2.) inbred hicks/losers that can't spell, nor maintain a vehicle with quality parts.
regardless, that truck looks like someone packed it up in a shipping container back in 1990, and forgot where he put it. Car museums should be lining up to buy that pristine monster for their diesel exhibits.
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