Listen up, you fool. You fucked up. You used the wrong form of there, which means I gotta correct you one the right form of there. I will educate you on them, and in front of all these people too, because a simple “there\*” will no longer suffice. Whatever has happened to grammar?

The first form is *their.* This version shows ownership to a group of people or a person who you don’t know much about or don’t want to reveal a lot about. Here’s an example used in a sentence: They ran out of `their` house.

The second form is there. There is a location, or a stand-in for a location. You use it to represent a location that you or a different person doesn’t know. You generally say it and point if giving directions, although you also use it in conversation saying that someone is over there. Here’s an example used in a sentence: He’s having a great time over `there.`

The third form is they’re, and it’s the form that people use the least. Think of it like the middle child of their and there. It’s a simple conjunction of They and Are. You would say it next to a verb, most often, and occasionally an adjective. Examples: `They’re` running away. `They’re` free. They’re`still` using the wrong form of there.

I hope all y’all little shits will now find out how to use the English language.