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Anonymous Posted 20 years ago
Grammar

REACHING, TEE-OFF and UPSIDE HIS HEAD

'Sugar Ray would put an opponent in four or five traps during every round in the first two or three rounds, just to see how his opponent would react. Ray would be REACHING, and he wouls stay just out of reach so he could measure you to knock you out, and you didn't even know what was happening until, BANG! you found yourself counting stars. Then,ON SOMEBODY ELSE, he might hit him hard in his side-BANG!-after hi made him miss a couple of jabs. He might do that in the first round. Then he'd TEE-OFF on the sucker UPSIDE HIS HEAD...'
Somebody to help me? Jo.
  

Top answer

reaching: I guess, boxing from a distance, not close-by on somebody else: when boxing someone else tee-off: hit hard, like in golf on the first strike upside his head: on or against the side of the head

  • reaching: I guess, boxing from a distance, not close-by on somebody else: when boxing someone else tee-off: hit hard, like in golf on the first strike upside his head: on or against the side of the head
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1 Answers
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reaching: I guess, boxing from a distance, not close-by

on somebody else: when boxing someone else

tee-off: hit hard, like in golf on the first strike

upside his head: on or against the side of the head

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