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Ivahew [28]
3 years ago
6

Imagine you were only given three wishes. How would you ask for your wishes so that you would eliminate all unforeseen and poten

tially negative consequences? (No wishing for more wishes.)
English
1 answer:
Jobisdone [24]3 years ago
8 0

Answer:

Me: I wish for more wishes.

genie: you can’t wish like that.

Me: I wish I could wish like that.

genie: that’s not how it works.

Me: I wish that was how it worked.

genie: what is wrong with you?

Me:

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What is your impression of Churchill's sentence? Does it seem correct or incorrect? Does it sound like a good sentence or not? W
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the one the question is refering to.

The writing 'rule' (myth) Churchill's reply satirizes is the 'Never end a sentence on a preposition' rule (i.g. as I intetionally did on the immediate sentence before this one). And his reply to it was something like 'This is the type of errant pedantry up with which I will not put.'

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Specially the 'up' and 'with' of 'put up with' could never go in the middle of a sentence, as 'put up with' is a phrasal verb, meaning the verb and the preposition must always be together in the correct order.

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