RE:RE:Their you go Canucks, WCP shares are worthlessIan the Barber or Barter must improve his English. He says "Their you go Canucks..." probably he wanted to say "There you go Canucks...". But most likely he skipped his English class and went to the pub. Later he joined the Crime Syndicate, Shorts and co.The word "their" can be a possesive adjective when it is before a noun and/ or a possesive pronoun when it stands alone, eg., this is "their" car, their home, their child and so on. As a possesive pronoun goes like this: this car is theirs, this child is theirs, this house is theirs and so forth. The word "there" is an adverb that denotes location, there you are, there is Ian again with his noise polution, "there is Canucks..." and so forth. So Ian do not mix the underwear here with the neck ties; they are, Not 'their," are different. There you are Ian you had a free lesson in English today.