Talk:Grannies Gone Wild/@comment-36700661-20181012181721/@comment-27578467-20181013082234

"I just meant "sent" as in "see them off" or "let them go there". Like how parents "send" their kids to school with their lunches."

"that was not the connotation of parens "sending" their kids to school, that wasn't really connected"

Either it was really connected and you meant "see them off", or it wasn't meant to be connected but was very clearly presented as such.

Either way, "to send" doesn't indicate granting permission, so "let them go there" doesn't work. "To send someone off" can mean something similar to "to see someone off", but you don't use "send off" in your sentence, you use "send". Twice in fact. "Send off" is not a 'loose' definition of send; they are two separate things with distinct meanings. It's similar to the difference between "let's kick things" and "let's kick things off".

This is aside from the fact that your original point revolves around AJ having prior knowledge that they were going to the resort, but this appears to be speculation since the show doesn't indicate she knew where they were staying.

My point is not to win a silly argument of semantics more than it is to point out how legitimately difficult it sometimes is for others to understand what you mean when you misuse words. Again, it's no shame to do so, but you should acknowledge when it happens and learn from it, rather than blaming the misunderstanding on others.