dedicated to the proposition that everyone must get drunk.

   Share on Facebook  
Angliholic  #449208  Mon, 03 Dec 07 02:36 PM

The fourth of July means beer and New Year's Eve is an entire night dedicated to the proposition that everyone must get drunk.

I'm not so sure of the meaning of "dedicated to the propositioon" in the above; could you rephrase it for me? Thanks.

  
Top 25 Contributor
Joined on Wed, Feb 14 2007
SomewhereinFormosa
Veteran Member (5,169)
Without true love, life is meaningless and worthless since our physical world is nothing but a dream. ~~Angliholic~~簡瑞達
Linguaphile  #449216  Mon, 03 Dec 07 03:00 PM
'a night when everybody is expected to get drunk'

the expression "dedicated to the proposition = devoted to the statement" is for emphasis I guess.

  
Top 500 Contributor
Joined on Tue, Jul 17 2007
Turkey
Full Member (140)
Grammar Geek  #449226  Mon, 03 Dec 07 03:23 PM
It's borrowing from a very famous speech delivered by Abraham Lincoln:

Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent, a new nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.

However, I don't understand why the original sentence starts at the Fourth of July and jumps to New Year's.

  
Top 10 Contributor
Joined on Tue, Jan 10 2006
Pennsylvania, USA
Veteran Member (15,583)
ModeratorProficient Speaker
Barbara, who answers in American English.
Angliholic  #449364  Tue, 04 Dec 07 01:37 AM
 Grammar Geek wrote:
It's borrowing from a very famous speech delivered by Abraham Lincoln:

Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent, a new nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.

However, I don't understand why the original sentence starts at the Fourth of July and jumps to New Year's.

Thanks, GG.

To make sure, what does "prosposition" mean? A proposal, suggestion, or statement?

  
Grammar Geek  #449389  Tue, 04 Dec 07 03:07 AM

Hi Angliholic,

proposition - note the spelling. Yes, the proposal, the suggestion.  In this case, more like "the idea."

Of course, what they really meant was that white, land-owning men were equal, but it was a good thought for its day.

  
Angliholic  #449406  Tue, 04 Dec 07 04:30 AM
 Grammar Geek wrote:

Hi Angliholic,

proposition - note the spelling. Yes, the proposal, the suggestion.  In this case, more like "the idea."

Of course, what they really meant was that white, land-owning men were equal, but it was a good thought for its day.

Thanks, GG.

  
AddThis Feed Button RSS Feed: ESL General English Grammar Questions
© 2008 MediaCET Ltd.
Terms and Conditions & Terms of Service