Funny looking in the mirror and seeing this room [closed]
What this sentence means: Funny looking in the mirror and seeing this room.
british-english
closed as unclear what you're asking by J. Taylor, JJJ, Nigel J, TrevorD, Davo Mar 26 at 15:08
Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
add a comment |
What this sentence means: Funny looking in the mirror and seeing this room.
british-english
closed as unclear what you're asking by J. Taylor, JJJ, Nigel J, TrevorD, Davo Mar 26 at 15:08
Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
2
You need more context. The sentence could read Funny (the clown called Mr Funny), looking in the mirror and seeing this room ... said to himself 'Where am I?'.
– Nigel J
Mar 25 at 11:41
1
We cannot interpret a sentence in isolation - it needs context; i.e. the surrounding sentences.
– TrevorD
Mar 26 at 0:56
1
Which specific part of the sentence is causing confusion? The use of funny there would normally have a comma after it (and the sentence would be slightly rephrased so that everything after the comma stood as an independent clause) and it's being used as a sentence modifier. Per Merriam-Webster, another sentence similar to it is Funny, things didn't turn out the way we planned. The part about looking into a mirror and seeing this room is no doubt meant to be humorous.
– Jason Bassford
Mar 26 at 1:51
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What this sentence means: Funny looking in the mirror and seeing this room.
british-english
What this sentence means: Funny looking in the mirror and seeing this room.
british-english
british-english
asked Mar 25 at 6:02
Shahruz RaadShahruz Raad
152
152
closed as unclear what you're asking by J. Taylor, JJJ, Nigel J, TrevorD, Davo Mar 26 at 15:08
Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
closed as unclear what you're asking by J. Taylor, JJJ, Nigel J, TrevorD, Davo Mar 26 at 15:08
Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
2
You need more context. The sentence could read Funny (the clown called Mr Funny), looking in the mirror and seeing this room ... said to himself 'Where am I?'.
– Nigel J
Mar 25 at 11:41
1
We cannot interpret a sentence in isolation - it needs context; i.e. the surrounding sentences.
– TrevorD
Mar 26 at 0:56
1
Which specific part of the sentence is causing confusion? The use of funny there would normally have a comma after it (and the sentence would be slightly rephrased so that everything after the comma stood as an independent clause) and it's being used as a sentence modifier. Per Merriam-Webster, another sentence similar to it is Funny, things didn't turn out the way we planned. The part about looking into a mirror and seeing this room is no doubt meant to be humorous.
– Jason Bassford
Mar 26 at 1:51
add a comment |
2
You need more context. The sentence could read Funny (the clown called Mr Funny), looking in the mirror and seeing this room ... said to himself 'Where am I?'.
– Nigel J
Mar 25 at 11:41
1
We cannot interpret a sentence in isolation - it needs context; i.e. the surrounding sentences.
– TrevorD
Mar 26 at 0:56
1
Which specific part of the sentence is causing confusion? The use of funny there would normally have a comma after it (and the sentence would be slightly rephrased so that everything after the comma stood as an independent clause) and it's being used as a sentence modifier. Per Merriam-Webster, another sentence similar to it is Funny, things didn't turn out the way we planned. The part about looking into a mirror and seeing this room is no doubt meant to be humorous.
– Jason Bassford
Mar 26 at 1:51
2
2
You need more context. The sentence could read Funny (the clown called Mr Funny), looking in the mirror and seeing this room ... said to himself 'Where am I?'.
– Nigel J
Mar 25 at 11:41
You need more context. The sentence could read Funny (the clown called Mr Funny), looking in the mirror and seeing this room ... said to himself 'Where am I?'.
– Nigel J
Mar 25 at 11:41
1
1
We cannot interpret a sentence in isolation - it needs context; i.e. the surrounding sentences.
– TrevorD
Mar 26 at 0:56
We cannot interpret a sentence in isolation - it needs context; i.e. the surrounding sentences.
– TrevorD
Mar 26 at 0:56
1
1
Which specific part of the sentence is causing confusion? The use of funny there would normally have a comma after it (and the sentence would be slightly rephrased so that everything after the comma stood as an independent clause) and it's being used as a sentence modifier. Per Merriam-Webster, another sentence similar to it is Funny, things didn't turn out the way we planned. The part about looking into a mirror and seeing this room is no doubt meant to be humorous.
– Jason Bassford
Mar 26 at 1:51
Which specific part of the sentence is causing confusion? The use of funny there would normally have a comma after it (and the sentence would be slightly rephrased so that everything after the comma stood as an independent clause) and it's being used as a sentence modifier. Per Merriam-Webster, another sentence similar to it is Funny, things didn't turn out the way we planned. The part about looking into a mirror and seeing this room is no doubt meant to be humorous.
– Jason Bassford
Mar 26 at 1:51
add a comment |
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2
You need more context. The sentence could read Funny (the clown called Mr Funny), looking in the mirror and seeing this room ... said to himself 'Where am I?'.
– Nigel J
Mar 25 at 11:41
1
We cannot interpret a sentence in isolation - it needs context; i.e. the surrounding sentences.
– TrevorD
Mar 26 at 0:56
1
Which specific part of the sentence is causing confusion? The use of funny there would normally have a comma after it (and the sentence would be slightly rephrased so that everything after the comma stood as an independent clause) and it's being used as a sentence modifier. Per Merriam-Webster, another sentence similar to it is Funny, things didn't turn out the way we planned. The part about looking into a mirror and seeing this room is no doubt meant to be humorous.
– Jason Bassford
Mar 26 at 1:51