UncleBuck
Well-Known Member
No, sorry. You don't know how the English language works. The word "that" does not refer to "radio" if it did you would have written the word "Radio" because otherwise the reader has no idea that you are referring to the subject of an entirely different sentence. "that" refers to the lunch meeting. The word "it" refers to the radio, but that is an entirely different sentence.
Do you understand that you cannot refer to the subject of another sentence and actually expect people to understand that you didn't mean the sentence it refers to, but another sentence written an hour before?
Also, do you know what sic stands for? Sic erat scriptum or The way it was written. Do you understand the concept behind the sic term? Because you are using it wrong, very very wrong, in fact you are using it in the opposite way it actually works.
For example, if you wrote the sentence " I am going to jump ovur the moon." and then I went to publish that sentence in some article or whatever I would write the sentence as "I am going to jump ovur (sic) the moon." That shows the reader that YOU wrote the word "over" as "ovur" and mispelled it yourself and I am only quoting what you wrote verbatim AS IT IS ORIGINALLY WRITTEN.
You never wrote the word RADIO in the original so writing another sentence using sic just means you are totally ignorant about this subject.
complete mental breakdown.