To: Stoat
Too old to be punched in the head by a customer who exception to Bauman's questions.Does this sentence make any sense? I guess you have to watch the video because this article is so poorly written it takes some real digging to find out what happened. Useless journalist.
13 posted on
12/29/2009 4:05:54 PM PST by
Harley
(Life is Tough, But It's a Lot Tougher When You're a Liberal. Stop Global Whining Now.)
To: Harley
Useless journalist. As opposed to what?
19 posted on
12/29/2009 4:17:20 PM PST by
Michael.SF.
(At least Hitler got the Olympics for Germany)
To: Harley
“Too old to be punched in the head by a customer who exception to Bauman’s questions.”
I’m sure that the word ‘took’ is missing. Should be between ‘who’ and ‘exception’...
28 posted on
12/29/2009 4:31:50 PM PST by
ButThreeLeftsDo
(Merry Christmas, FReepers!)
To: Harley
Too old to be punched in the head by a customer who exception to Bauman's questions.
Does this sentence make any sense?
Sometimes, when the sentence doesn't make sense, I look for a misprint or an omission. I've also learned to analyze the context in order to arrive at the proper contents when what's in front of me doesn't make sense.
In the context of what was being said, I read that statement as "Too old to be punched in the head by a customer who took exception to Bauman's questions.".
The context is important and it led me to conclude that something was missing from the sentence or statement. A missing word is sometimes what happens when your typing gets ahead of what you're thinking. However, proofreading is a writer's best friend.
38 posted on
12/29/2009 4:44:02 PM PST by
adorno
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