I often see messages such as "there are spontaneous pizza at XXX". I don't quite understand what the "spontaneous" means here. Can anyone help me about it?
Top answer
Hi, Where do you see these rather odd messages? There is spontaneous pizza . .
— Clive
Hi, Where do you see these rather odd messages?
There is spontaneous pizza .
.
There are spontaneous pizza s .
.
Free · every Monday
Get the Weekly English Kit 📬
New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.
Are you sure you have the full quote? I think it's more likely to be "there are spontaneous pizza parties..." or "there is a spontaneous pizza party..."
The use of the phrase "scheduled spontaneity" clearly indicates that some kind of joke or gag is intended. Beyond that I can't add much. Is there some reason you don't want to provide the full context, including the surrounding events?