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Chivalry Posted 15 years ago
Grammar

I don't understand this sentence

"Yea. good thing goal difference doesnt matter or anything. might want to avoid me for awhile"

I don't understand why he's placing three nouns in a row, and neither do I understand what that means.

BTW. his is sentence quoted from somebody's wall. So do not correct me those letters mistakenly in the wrong lowercase,

because it's not my post!
  

Top answer

Well then, to fill out the graffiti on the wall: Yea. [ It's a ] good thing [ that a/the ] goal difference doesn ' t matter or anything. [ You ] might want to avoid me for awhile.

  • Well then, to fill out the graffiti on the wall: Yea.
  • [ It's a ] good thing [ that a/the ] goal difference doesn ' t matter or anything.
  • [ You ] might want to avoid me for awhile.
  • The first sentence seems to indicate that the writer is unaffected by losing a game, but the second sentence seems to indicate that he is very angry.
  • The message seems mixed; perhaps further context (if there were any) would clarify it.
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1 Answers
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Well then, to fill out the graffiti on the wall:

Yea. [It's a] good thing [that a/the] goal difference doesn't matter or anything. [You] might want to avoid me for awhile.

The first sentence seems to indicate that the writer is unaffected by losing a game, but the second sentence seems to indicate that he is very angry. The message seems mixed; perhap

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