Gives sparking clean a new meaning.
Please provide some examples.* Why use an apt four-letter word when there's an even less syntactically correct but substantially longer option?![]()
Is that a young Jack Nicholson on the right of picture????
I thought it was like a piddle-pack! argh!In some areas of Canada the milk comes in plastic pouches/bags that fit into that plastic jug thingy. It's just for dispensing milk from the grocery store.
Mais c'est vrai!C'est dommage!
it goes a lot deeper than that.
ummmm,
Prepositions, Ending a Sentence With
Yes, you can end a sentence with a preposition
Ending a sentence with a preposition (such as with, of, and to) is permissible in the English language. It seems that the idea that this should be avoided originated with writers Joshua Poole and John Dryden, who were trying to align the language with Latin, but there is no reason to suggest ending a sentence with a preposition is wrong. Nonetheless, the idea that it is a rule is still held by many.
From <https://www.merriam-webster.com/grammar/prepositions-ending-a-sentence-with>
Yes, in his Oscar-winning role as R.P. McMurphy.
How the heck do people remember this stuff and please don't ask me what I had for dinner last night!Yes, in his Oscar-winning role as R.P. McMurphy.
Don't worry, @pseudoid ... I can't remember what you had for dinner last night either!How the heck do people remember this stuff and please don't ask me what I had for dinner last night!![]()
It's one of my very favorite movies.How the heck do people remember this stuff and please don't ask me what I had for dinner last night!![]()
Sure is. And that's a young Danny deVito with his feet up.