Passive subjunctive perfect progressive: Difference between revisions

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{{a|plainenglish|[[File:Knee-slide.jpg|450px|center|Well, I think this calls for a knee-slide, don’t you?]]}}A [[passive subjunctive perfect progressive]] is the kind of grammatical construction one would want if one were to have had been being used as a pawn in a game of [[ISDA ninja|ninja]] [[Legal|legal]] drafting.
{{a|plainenglish|[[File:Knee-slide.jpg|450px|center|Well, I think this calls for a knee-slide, don’t you?]]}}A [[passive subjunctive perfect progressive]] is the kind of grammatical construction one would want if one were to have had been being used as a pawn in a game of [[ISDA ninja|ninja]] [[Legal|legal]] drafting.
The definition of [[passive progressive]]: someone who says:
{{quote|“If that construction were to have had been being used as a [[passive subjunctive perfect progressive]], would you hold it against me? That is to say, would it have had been being held against me by you?”}}


{{sa}}
{{sa}}
*[[Plain English]]
*[[Plain English]]
*[[Subjunctive]]
{{egg}}
{{egg}}

Revision as of 14:04, 30 August 2022

Towards more picturesque speech
Well, I think this calls for a knee-slide, don’t you?
Well, I think this calls for a knee-slide, don’t you?
SEC guidance on plain EnglishIndex: Click to expand:
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A passive subjunctive perfect progressive is the kind of grammatical construction one would want if one were to have had been being used as a pawn in a game of ninja legal drafting.

The definition of passive progressive: someone who says:

“If that construction were to have had been being used as a passive subjunctive perfect progressive, would you hold it against me? That is to say, would it have had been being held against me by you?”


See also