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Park sang joon Posted 11 years ago
Grammar

The implied words.

Leaving your wife for a tramp like that? You call it a success? I call it depravity! Oh, good luck to you!

I'd like to know "Are you" is omitting before "Leaving."
Thank you in advance for your help.
  

Top answer

" No. Leaving your wife for a tramp like that? You call that a success?

  • " No.
  • Leaving your wife for a tramp like that?
  • You call that a success?
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5 Answers
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park sang joonI'd like to know "Are you" is omitting before "Leaving."
No. Leaving your wife for a tramp like that? You call that a success? is understood as “You call leaving your wife for a tramp like that a success?”
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I want to revive this thread.
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Is there something you aren't sure about?
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Thank you, Blue Jay, in advance for your message. Emotion: smile
"Leaving your wife for a tramp like that?"
Then I'd like to know how part
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When spoken aloud the pattern of stresses and the tone would make it clear that the speaker was disgusted by the matter and meant it to be a rhetorical question that amounts to "How can you possibly be pleased with yourself for doing something so stupid and shameful?"
"Leaving your wife for a tramp like that? You call it a success

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