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Anonymous Posted 6 years ago
Grammar

"You-shaped hole" meaning

I've encountered this in a sentence "This place had a you-shaped hole, and now it doesn't". What does this phrase mean?

  

Top answer

It should be a U-shaped hole.

  • It should be a U-shaped hole.
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4 Answers
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It should be a U-shaped hole.

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It is probably a U-shaped hole. That is a hole in the shape of the letter "U".

Where did you see this sentence? What is the context?

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I've encountered this in a sentence "This place had a you-shaped u-shaped hole, and now it doesn't". What does this phrase mean?

a hole shaped like the letter u. I. I'm not sure what the writer means. If the hole is not there now, It sounds like someone filled in the hole again,
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anonymous

I've encountered this in a sentence "This place had a you-shaped hole, and now it doesn't". What does this phrase mean?

Ok, anonymous, did you encounter this line in poetry? What was the context?

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