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Anonymous Posted 9 years ago
Vocabulary

...with what's in here...

Hi all,
what does "with what's in here" mean in the following situation:
"So, who is your dad?
Sam, Bill or Harry?
- I don't know.
But which one did you invite?
Oh, my God!
Do they know?
What would you write to a total stranger?
'Please come to my wedding,
you might be my father'? No.
They think that Mom sent the invites,
and with what's in here,
no surprise they said yes!"

Could you explain it/ transform it more simply?
Thank you in advance.
  

Top answer

It is not possible to tell what they are talking about just from this dialogue. Something is in something else, and this encouraged them to accept the invitation.

  • It is not possible to tell what they are talking about just from this dialogue.
  • Something is in something else, and this encouraged them to accept the invitation.
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3 Answers
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It is not possible to tell what they are talking about just from this dialogue. Something is in something else, and this encouraged them to accept the invitation.
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Without further context I would interpret it as follows:

A: So, which one is your dad? Sam, Bill, or Harry?

B: I don't know.

A: But which one of them did you invite to the wedding?

B: Oh my ***! Do they know I invited them?

A: So you invited all three? What did you write to these three total strangers? "Please come to my wedding. You might be
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This is from "Mamma Mia."

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