so im writing a sentnce with the phras "to read my library books before their due," with "due" here meaning a noun: "a person's right; what is owed to someone." "their" here dnotes possession of due, but i think people will think I misspelld the contractd form of "they are due," bcause "due" is more commonly adjective than it is a noun, esp. about library books. I don't want to be misinterpreted, wat do?
>>9411472
>wat due
Fixed
>>9411477
nice
>>9411472
Use "there due"
>>9411491
where
>>9411472
"to read my library book right there dude"
"before their time"
>>9411472
autism is generally unhelpful for a writer of fiction, if that is what you are talking about, op.
>>9411472
Nah dude you're good
>>9411472
My advice is keep writing things which mean the exact opposite of what the mechanics of the English language allows. Should b gud.