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Anonymous Posted 7 years ago
Grammar

That desire that itch /beforehand

I have hard time to understand the uses of "itch" it seems it being uses as a verb.

Can you please explain this "hat desire that itch" in other words?

Also what is beforehand in this context? Thanks for helping.


True desire in the heart, that itch that you have whatever it is you want to do, that thing that you want to do to help others and to grow and to make money that desire that itch, that’s God’s proof to you, sent beforehand, already to indicate that it’s yours.

  

Top answer

This sentence is a sort of run-on stream-of-consciousness. It is not properly structured or punctuated. As far as I can tell, given that the sentence is a mess, I believe that "itch" is intended as a noun, and that the writer is referring to two things: "that desire" and "that itch".

  • This sentence is a sort of run-on stream-of-consciousness.
  • It is not properly structured or punctuated.
  • As far as I can tell, given that the sentence is a mess, I believe that "itch" is intended as a noun, and that the writer is referring to two things: "that desire" and "that itch".
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1 Answers
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This sentence is a sort of run-on stream-of-consciousness. It is not properly structured or punctuated. As far as I can tell, given that the sentence is a mess, I believe that "itch" is intended as a noun, and that the writer is referring to two things: "that desire" and "that itch".

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