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Discover Ludwig"make graffiti" is a correct and commonly used phrase in written English.
It is used to describe the act of creating graffiti, which is typically done by spray painting or drawing on walls or other public surfaces. Example: The local teenagers were caught by the police making graffiti on the side of the abandoned building.
Exact(9)
IN LONDON, you can take classes on how to make graffiti.
I now have one called 'The Radical,' about people who go to make graffiti on the Wailing Wall.
As for Palestine, I'd met a Palestinian woman in Morocco last September who turned out to make graffiti and I later on wrote about her on my blog.
"What little I could make out sounds like, 'I want to make graffiti with you.' Our office has turned into the U.N. of graffiti".
The exhibition deftly evokes the grimy context that helps make graffiti so compelling, but its arrangement of objects and images is unabashedly sophisticated.
Hookt.com, a Web site for hip-hop culture that offers music and fashion reviews as well as links to sites where teens can make graffiti art or create rap beats, will start to sell clothes this month.
Similar(48)
A French spokesman said that graffiti artists make graffiti--that's what they do.
I decided to make graffiti-spotting the purpose of my city break and set off to see what treasures I could unearth.
"Maybe 'art' makes graffiti easier to explain," he told me.
Mr. Garcia, 18, uses spray paint and makes graffiti.
Each was charged with third-degree criminal mischief, a felony, and making graffiti, a misdemeanor.
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