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Anonymous Posted 11 years ago
Vocabulary

got a A in shop

?an you help me understand what the phrase "I got a A in shop" means here: Lucky for you, King, you hit me in the Kevlar. Thank you for that. 'Cause I got a A in shop. (it's from ncis)
  

Top answer

Anonymous "I got a A in shop" Do you understand this? - I got an A in English. I got a C in Mathematics.

  • Anonymous "I got a A in shop" Do you understand this?
  • - I got an A in English.
  • I got a C in Mathematics.
  • I got a D in History.
  • This is "Shop"
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7 Answers
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Anonymous"I got a A in shop"
Do you understand this? -
I got an A in English.
I got a C in Mathematics.
I got a D in History.

This is "Shop"
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AlpheccaStarsThis is "Shop"
Woodwork?
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And this is "shop" too.
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Shop class can also teach about other kinds of machines:
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AlpheccaStarsAnd this is "shop" too.
This is American English.
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AnonymousThis is American English.
Right. We have the idiom "shop talk" meaning men talking among themselves about what is happening in their workplace.

When I went to high school, the classes were segregated; the boys took "shop" and learned about machines, mechanics and tools. The girls took "Home Ec" where they learned about cooking, sewing, and m
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In the US, the phrase "I got an A in shop." is typically said in response to a statement like: "How did you fix that?" or "Three people tried to fix that and they couldn't." or "I didn't think anyone could fix that, I was ready to throw it away." "Shop" is a non-academic course in junior high school where students learn how to use hand and machine tools and build things.

In the quoted p

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