I knew I recognized that jaw from somewhere.
If the highest court agrees to hear the case, and if it is still in process when Colorado’s ballot hits its certification deadline on Jan. 5, the Justices ordered that Trump’s name should be included on the GOP primary ballot, ahead of the court’s final decision.
So if the Supreme Court agrees to hear an appeal, and doesn't decide before the deadline, Trump's name will be included on the ballot.
I could really go for a beef and cheddar right now.
That running gag had me crying.
Somehow my brain isn't processing the picture. I can only see an absolute unit of a cat tongue.
Were they put there by a man?
Three years ago? Wtf are you talking about?
I think it's an obligatorily separated phrasal verb. This page has some examples of others like it https://random-idea-english.blogspot.com/2013/04/phrasal-verbs-that-are-always-separated.html?m=1
I think you're getting stuck on the "game over" part. This by itself does mean "the end of something" But "start over" is a separable phrasal verb that means "to begin again". So you can say "Let's start over" or "Let's start the game over".
I always felt a little bad for ESL students who just discovered phrasal verbs because they're basically a whole new set of often nonsensical verbs to learn.
For some reason I was expecting loss.
Yeah, what the heck? It's going to make the smell way worse too.