i know no one is gonna like what i am infering but this is what i think…it is keep on coming to me …
are we pakis as a nation backstabbers…we backstabbed biharis (those stranded in bangladesh)…we backstabbed taliban …we did it with mujahideen …and now we r goona do it with kashmiris…
sub say pehlay pakistan …is it what nations strive for…just to save our own neck …let the others burn…
why r we keep on changing our policies…with are bark from america we can take a u turn…
it was ppl from our lands who fired in harm during rebelion in saudia during british rule…
i am confused with all this…
plz if i am wrong ( and i wish i am )convince me…
Didn't an American General say just a few years ago that: "Pakistanis will sell their ............."
Ellipses are used in quotations to show where words have been left out. For example, here is a statement you might wish to shorten:
William Shakespeare, who lived in the sixteenth century, wrote many plays for the theatre, including comedies, tragedies, and histories.
Use ellipses to show where words have been left out.
William Shakespeare … wrote … comedies, tragedies, and histories.
http://www.somge.com/english/grammar/punctuation/ellipses.htm
Use ellipses to indicate an omission in a quotation. Recently, MLA style adjusted in order to differentiate between ellipses that may already appear in a passage and those ellipses that you, as the writer, add in order to abbreviate a passage that you are quoting. In accordance with current practice, you should add brackets around elliptical points when you add them to a passage. Do not, however, begin a quoted passage with ellipses. Example:
Carlyle observes, "The wretched are not cheerful company. Dante . . .] was not a man to conciliate men."
Macaulay wrote of Edward Russell, "Bad as he was, he was much under the influence of two feelings . . .]. Professional spirit and party spirit were strong in him."
Note that the three elliptical marks do not replace normal punctuation. Thus, a period is required after the ellipses when the ellipses indicate the omission of the end of a sentence.
Use a line of ellipses to indicate the omission of one or more lines in a quotation of three or more lines of verse. Example:
Forgive my grief for one removed,
Thy creature, whom I found so fair.
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
Forgive these wild and wandering cries,
Confusions of a wasted youth.