Thread:Dayne Dariel/@comment-29540002-20161111230715/@comment-27247962-20161113211729

Not to be pretentious, BUT their son's knowledge of words is far superior to their own understanding of them.

Your first sentence might give off a pretentious vibe, but you quickly smodder that by talking about 'a desire', which never really indicates arrogance, rather jealousy. To follow it up by a pitiful assessment that you'll always be laughed at and scorned for what you desire. Ending it with a sour acceptation off what you are, barely oozing out pride or anything the like.

Do you still consider it pretentious?

~

How was that? :)