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Old October 14th 03, 02:52 AM
Dave Bushong
 
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Ron Hardin wrote:

Dr. Anton Phibes wrote:

"This is really, really [expletive] brilliant," Bono said during
the ceremony, using the f-word as an adjective.
The speech aired live on the East Coast. The FCC said it
received 234 complaints, all but 17 of them from individuals
associated with the Parents Television Council, a nonprofit
group that monitors programs for adult content.



That's an adverb, not an adjective.


Actually, "brilliant" is the direct object of the sentence, which by
definition, is a noun, so that particular modifier is an adjective, and
not an adverb. "This" is the subject, "is" is the verb, 3PS of "to be",
and the sentence is actually not grammatically correct, so there are
some problems deciding what part each word performs, or the ****ing
intent. When you have an illiterate moron musician trying to speak the
King's English, you get "This is really, really, ****ing brilliant."
What the **** does that mean? Is there, perchance, a light in his eyes
that makes him unable to read the ****ing teleprompter?

If he were to have said "This is really, really ****ing brilliantly
done", then '****ing' would have been modifying an adverb, which still
makes it an adjective. The only other uses of "****ing" would be either
present participle ("Bubba is ****ing his new cellmate"), or gerund (a
noun formed from a verb, such as "I enjoy ****ing", or maybe the classic
failed Minnie Mouse insanity defense, during their divorce proceeding,
where Mickey tells the Judge that Minnie is "****ing Goofy."

(anyone interested in this stuff, go to
http://www.uottawa.ca/academic/arts/...r/verbals.html
)

73,
Dave
KZ1O