@Shrimperor
Well, I can understand the impatience; "getting to know each other after marriage", once commonplace, is now something of a lost art, as most people try to do that before getting hitched. (Not that I'm defending the old system.) Nonetheless, that is exactly what is happening here, for better or worse.
@Deathhappens
That too, perhaps, but there is also a noticeable impatience in some parts of this comment section regarding why the main couple aren't exactly behaving like you'd expect newlyweds to act.
>That too, perhaps, but there is also a noticeable impatience in some parts of this comment section regarding why the main couple aren't exactly behaving like you'd expect newlyweds to act.
@pip25 nah, i was meme'ing like Deathhappens said.
if this series comply and they sleep together then that means this series is ending. Perhaps a sequel with their children as protagonists but this series will be ending when they do it.
Every single contraction is acceptable if the sentence is correct when you split the contractions you used into the separate words that made them. If "Those are cute" makes sense, "Those're cute" is fine too. Every single contraction is frowned on in formal settings or writing, though. If you were writing an essay or a research paper or something, you might want to lay off the contractions for instance. Depicting a husband talking to his wife in a comic, bring on the contractions (which sounds like telling them to have a baby, so joke fully intended).