What @3 said. And Bethany, with regard to your final sentence, there are many much less awkward ways to avoid ending sentences with prepositions. For instance, "What is the world coming to, bitches?"
@#5
As Churchill famously minuted to an aide that had corrected his prose to remove a dangling preposition: "This is an imposition up with which I will not put!"
If you can spot more than one error in their original sentence, you're twice as likely to fry something in duck fat that ought not be or add truffle oil to something that never asked for it.
I do not require that my burger be prepared by someone with perfect grammar. I'd almost prefer it not be.
I'll save my train fare for a fine beer and have a great burger at Wild Wheat or Cal's American at Kent Station, thank you very much...or maybe just get a great weinersnitchel at the Berliner Pub in Renton (can you say larger...real german larger?)
I've seen far worse.
Me have already viewed much more badly.
As Churchill famously minuted to an aide that had corrected his prose to remove a dangling preposition: "This is an imposition up with which I will not put!"
However, you can't just smoosh two sentences together with a comma and call them one. That's fucked up.
Jesus.
I do not require that my burger be prepared by someone with perfect grammar. I'd almost prefer it not be.
Slick enough for the mall...don't make me laugh!
So now the Mall is just as good as the City!
I'll save my train fare for a fine beer and have a great burger at Wild Wheat or Cal's American at Kent Station, thank you very much...or maybe just get a great weinersnitchel at the Berliner Pub in Renton (can you say larger...real german larger?)
The burgers are mistaken mistakes but not indisputably so.