@myst4au wrote:
Jrossetti - Would you be concerned if 1% of the day you did not have electricity? Out of 1,440 minutes, you would not have electricity 14 minutes. Probably OK, unless it was 14 minutes in a row and you were dependent upon electrically operated life support equipment.
Or maybe you could hold your breathe for 1% of the day? 14 minutes. In 10 second increments, lets see, there are 86,400 seconds in a day. 10 seconds at a time. Works out to holding your breathe 8,640 times. Big number.
Wait a minute, in another post, you said that you know "a TON of full time mystery shoppers," and I pointed out that that means either 2,000 or 2,240 Full Time Mystery shoppers. Lets assume that you do (I don't). So, 1% of 2,000 is 20 people. I guess it would be alright if 20 of them went to jail, as long as you weren't one of them. Wait, you said, "under 1%", so maybe you really meant 0.1%? That way only 2 of your 2000 Full Time Mystery Shopper acquaintances would be arrested.
I can assure you that I am not going to be of them.
Again, until you look up what an Idiom means, you and are are not going to be able to have much of a discourse because you're not even on the same page.
No one has provided any evidence that any mystery shopper in existence has ever been arrested for performing a mystery shop for loss prevention at a business. So I dont even know where your 1% number comes from.
Seriously though, you need to look up Idiom. Then we can talk more. I think it might help you be less confused.
Lastly, you wouldn't be one of them whether you did them, or you didn't, because it doesn't happen.
Also, under 1% is anything from never to .99% repeating. I can tell you from personal experience that I have had a hand in over 1,000 of these assignments and exactly none of them have ever had this happen.
I can tell you that Taylor and associates has done this for something like a decade and said he's had one person and he's done tens of thousands.
I hope this makes you less confused.
Also, to make life easier for you Ive printed the defintion of idiom so you won't have to think someone is talking about 2,000 people when they use an expression with "ton" in it. Maybe english is your second language, and I want to make sure someone explains so you dont look so ridiculous trying to use it as a number when it's nothing more than a simile for "a lot".
Common Idioms
Some idioms are used by most people that speak English; others are used by a more select group.
Common idioms that refer to people include:
A chip on your shoulder - means you are holding a grudge
High as a kite - means you are drunk or on drugs
Sick as a dog - means you are very ill
A ton of cattle - means that there are a lot of cattle
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Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 05/05/2015 09:14PM by jrossetti.