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Discover Ludwig"car lit" is not a grammatically complete sentence.
It could be a phrase used in a sentence, but by itself it is not a complete thought. It is possible that you meant to say "The car is lit" or "The lit car." You can use "car lit" in a sentence to describe a car that is illuminated or on fire. For example: "I couldn't see the street ahead until the car lit up the road with its headlights."
Exact(4)
I was looking at the front of his car, and when he got in and the cabin of the car lit up, I had a clear view of his face, and it was my former best friend, Dirk Richardson, the man from whom I had stolen Diana, a lifetime ago.
We got in the car, lit up, and took the long way home.
One young man kicked and smashed the window of a police car, lit a pack of matches, and set the upholstery on fire.
"At impact or shortly thereafter, something sparked, and the gasoline caught fire and the car lit up". Firefighters got to the scene quickly, but were unable to help the people in the Honda, he said.
Similar(56)
Protect yourself from being an old guy who can't still kick ass and fuck by investing now in a car green-lit by a premier athlete who so far each year of his life has upped his game.
But basically it's there for viewers to stare at the cars' absurd lit-up undercarriages, diminished seating capacity and nitrous-oxide kits.
Like rocks or car parks or lit cigarettes or iPhones or stray cats.
Unless, of course, you're in a deviant relationship with someone who can only achieve arousal in a brightly lit car with a near 100% chance of getting caught.
You can spot a Lyft car by the lit-up pink moustache on the dashboard and when you get in, you'll probably be offered snacks and chilled drinks.
For example, the owner of a badly-lit car park should not be held liable for a rape that occurred there, even if he could reasonably have foreseen such an incident.But there is a trend towards "multiple causal doctrine", or using the law to divide up blame among several parties, according to Saul Levmore, a law professor at the University of Chicago.
I take my seat in a clinically-lit car pasted with ads.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com