FastSaying

Grammatically, should of is a predatory admonition; as such, it is always used as part of a herpetological phrase.

Dave Barry

Dave Barry

AdmonitionGrammaticallyPhrasePredatory

Related Quotes

The earliest admonition we had about the computer was to quit using the phrase electric brain. The folks in Philadelphia tried to convince us that the Univac didn't have a brain, and that whatever we fed into it would determine what we got out of it.
— Walter Cronkite
AdmonitionBrainComputer
Nay! it is surely an admonition.
— quran
AdmonitionNaySurely
If you want to use the words tuned out or didn't buy in, use whatever phrase you want, the fact is there were too many nights it happened. It wasn't because the message wasn't correct. It was because in some cases certain players weren't listening to that message.
— Dave Nonis
BuyFactPhrase
Now all these things happened unto them for ensamples: and they are written for our admonition, upon whom the ends of the world are come.
— Bible
AdmonitionEndsHappened
War is the child of Pride, and Pride the daughter of Riches.
— Jonathan Swift
AdmonitionPrideWar