Anonymous There is everything wrong with you. It's not just your hair. It's your makeup and your clothes.
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AnonymousThere is everything wrong with you. It's not just your hair. It's your makeup and your clothes.It works for me.
Anonymous Does the first sentence mean anything and correct? Does it fit the context?There is everything wrong with you. It's not just your hair. It's your makeup and your clothes.ThankYouI'm not sure about this one, but I feel a hyphen between everything and wrong is in order:
screamererI feel a hyphen between everything and wrong is in order:There is everything-wrong with you.Not sure though!That is definitely wrong.
Anonymous How about 'everything is wrong with you'. The 'there is' is just superfluous.I beleive it's Ok; however, I would rearrange it as follows:
fivejedjon screamererI feel a hyphen between everything and wrong is in order:There is everything-wrong with you.Not sure though!That is definitely wrong.Not even a chance?
screamererIf everything-wrong was replaced with everything-wronged, would it still be wrong?:Yes
screamererHow about:There is wrong-everything with you. ..?NO