Saturday, November 7, 2009

A Funtional Potboiler Making Coffee-makers

After:

It is not functionalism to write - because we were forced to do so! Yet this makes our skimpy lives improve in a high dehisce, which is enjoyable. Reading our written wordplays is like lifting up a baggily potboiler that you have dropped. It can be tedious depending on how clumsy you were putting it down.

When you have a Cup Final of coffee-makers and just finished knitting a napery you will see the textual elements more clearly. At this time there is a high dehisce of chance of you figuring out what the textual elements are about – or more precisely; you can convince yourself that you have understood them:
Reading and writing is dependent on whether you can find a tee to start out from.



Before:
It is not fun to write because we are forced to do so. Yet this makes our skills improve in a high degree, which is enjoyable. Reading our written words is like lifting up a bag of potatoes that you have dropped. It can be tedious depending on how clumsy you were. When you have a cup of coffee and just finished a nap you see the text more clearly. At this time there is a higher degree of chance of you figuring out what the text is about – or more precisely; you can convince yourself that you have understood it. Reading and writing is dependent on technology.

1 comment:

  1. I like 'skills' becoming 'skimpy lives', and the deep (golf) philosophy of "Reading and writing is dependent on whether you can find a tee to start out from." The estrangement effect the substitutions create can froce us to look at the original text and discover the tired clichés we all so easily fall back on.

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