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Discover LudwigSentence The phrase "broken ass" is not considered grammatically correct or suitable for professional or formal writing
It is an informal idiom used mainly in spoken English to mean a person who is not prepared to do something. For example: "He's a broken ass when it comes to doing the dishes, so I always have to remind him."
Exact(2)
Maybe I have a broken ass, and am doomed to never fully tap into the sensory pleasure center that others have there.
The guy who was talking to objects, Raphael, tells me that he had no visions, no silky sensations just a broken ass for ten days straight.
Similar(58)
The 2-liter's plastic is much thicker and will take a lot longer to break, ass well as keeping out unwanted bugs.
So to all you broke-ass DJs out there: sometimes it's better to think of the glass being half-full, even when guzzling whiskey out of it.
You had to break your ass and be as good as you could be".
I did it the old-fashioned way: I went to acting school and broke my ass, studied hard.
You want to try that at home, get a couple of chairs, clear your mind, study Zen, and you'll break your ass!" Penn's version of "Abracadabra!" was a muttered "Now I give the cards another false cut".
If you're a cartoonist, he can make or break your sorry ass".
His blue sports coat covers it halfway, but I can see it broken into sections, departments of ass, high and low, just like mine.
Rae is black, and she is awkward, and she is a girl, but she is also a beacon of success through self-awareness in an era when Kim Kardashian's ass breaking the internet is the bar.
The law I am inviting seriously ill people to break is an ass.
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