I am always #Wary when I see #Adverts from people claiming to be a #Doctor and selling a #MiracleCure from the #USA.
I am seeing claims about #VitaminB12
You do have to be careful if you are #Vegan though #Marmite is a good source. Tablets are cheap but a very high dose. It is so much not a problem that the adverts reek of #Privatised #Health #ConGames with their claims of #Undiagnosed #Deficiency
https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/vitamin-b12-or-folate-deficiency-anaemia/
#wary #adverts #doctor #miraclecure #usa #vitaminb12 #vegan #marmite #privatised #health #congames #undiagnosed #deficiency
Maybe it's just me, but I am seeing a whole lot of people using "weary" when they mean "wary" in online communications. Social media and so-called "more professional" situations like internal Slack, presentations, in-house reports and documents, etc.
Am I just waving an old-person flag and this is a cool thing the kids are doing these days? Maybe a widely-used autocorrect facility is tripping them up? Or is this another example of language shifting in unexpected ways?
Retainer https://retainer.dev/#main_section
> The likelyhood for a client to change service providers after setting up automatic payments is extreamly low. Just ask your local gym!.
Is it unrealistic to expect half-way decent English as a sign of a legitimate, trustworthy service?