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NL888 Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

Does "US hardware" here refer to "US interceptors"?

And, "said missile" refers to NK launched missile?

Context:

And if by some remote reason they did fire off one of those in our general direction there would be enough U.S hardware between north korea and the u.s to baste it, fry it, and serve said missile just in time for dinner.

Yes, we have a huge advantage in interceptors (SM-3, ABM's) and a retaliatory capability that could glass NK in minutes using just one Ohio-class boomer, but they have a large advantage in the crazy gene department.
  

Top answer

US interceptors Yes. Maybe aircraft, maybe missiles. s aid missile Yes.

  • US interceptors Yes.
  • Maybe aircraft, maybe missiles.
  • s aid missile Yes.
  • Clive
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2 Answers
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US interceptors Yes. Maybe aircraft, maybe missiles.

said missile Yes.

Clive
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"said" in this context means "the previously-mentioned"

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