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HungryHippo1234 Posted 6 years ago
Grammar

Besides

There was this conversation:

A: I won fair and square.

B: Yeah, you did besides the part you stabbed me in the back.

A little context: Person A was suppoed to help Person B win, but instead got himself the win.


Does this mean Person A did win fair and square, but stabbed his friend in the back in the process, or does this mean that Person A did not win fair and square?

  

Top answer

Tere was this conversation: A: I won fair and square. B: Yeah, you did apart from besides the part where you stabbed me in the back. Person B is being ironic when he says this.

  • Tere was this conversation: A: I won fair and square.
  • B: Yeah, you did apart from besides the part where you stabbed me in the back.
  • Person B is being ironic when he says this.
  • A little context: Person A was suppoed to help Person B win, but instead got himself the win.
  • Does this mean Person A did win fair and square, but stabbed his friend in the back in the process, No or does this mean that Person A did not win fair and square?
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1 Answers
0

Tere was this conversation:

A: I won fair and square.

B: Yeah, you did apart from besides the part where you stabbed me in the back. Person B is being ironic when he says this.

A little context: Person A was suppoed to help Person B win, but instead got himself the win.


Does this mean Person A did win fair and square, but stabbed his

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