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Christine Christie Posted 4 years ago
Grammar

Serenity

Does this sentence make sense?



"Despite her terrible accident which left her disabled, she lives with a lot of serenity, including when she speaks about the accident."



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THANK YOU.

  

Top answer

Christine Christie Does this sentence make sense? Yes, but I fear that your excellent use of "live" in its active sense was accidental. You can live with pain, meaning to go through life feeling pain, and you can live with grace, meaning that you conduct yourself gracefully.

  • Christine Christie Does this sentence make sense?
  • Yes, but I fear that your excellent use of "live" in its active sense was accidental.
  • You can live with pain, meaning to go through life feeling pain, and you can live with grace, meaning that you conduct yourself gracefully.
  • You aren't conducting yourself painfully or going through life feeling grace.
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1 Answers
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Christine ChristieDoes this sentence make sense?

Yes, but I fear that your excellent use of "live" in its active sense was accidental. You can live with pain, meaning to go through life feeling pain, and you can live with grace, meaning that you conduct yourself gracefully. You aren't conducting yourself painfully or going through life feeling grace.

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