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BW2/3 Posted 20 years ago
Grammar

a piece of work

Smith told a dirty joke on the piece of scultpure standing in front of the tall building. He said that what in the world the artist was thinking when he sculptured that a piece of crap. It was totally nonsene. He was no Picasso. Picasso had earnd his right to do anything.

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Top answer

Smith told a dirty joke on the piece of sculpture standing in front of a tall building. He said, “What in the world was the artist thinking when he sculptured that piece of ****? It was totally nonsense.

  • Smith told a dirty joke on the piece of sculpture standing in front of a tall building.
  • He said, “What in the world was the artist thinking when he sculptured that piece of ****?
  • It was totally nonsense.
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2 Answers
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Smith told a dirty joke on the piece of sculpture standing in front of a tall building. He said, “What in the world was the artist thinking when he sculptured that piece of ****? It was totally nonsense. He was no Picasso because Picasso had earned his right to do anything.”
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But you do realize that simply being critical of the sculpture is not the same as telling a dirty joke?

And if he did tell a dirty joke, it would be ABOUT it, not ON it, unless he was standing on it while he told the joke.

Finally, ...earned THE right.

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