_________ is dangerous in space.
"Nonstopdrivel" wrote:
This one in particularly drives me nuts because it's completely meaningless. At the very least it's tautologically redundant. You could truncate the "in space" and get an identical meaning.
Or, for that matter, you could add the phrase "in space" to almost any sentence without significantly altering it. "I like eating in space." "He prefers to drive in space." "My computer sits on the desk in space." Unless you're grappling with a singularity,
everything is in space.
Then again, it's fun to add "in bed" to the end of Chinese fortune cookie fortunes too. ;)
"millertime" wrote: