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Discover LudwigThe phrase "which has fun" is not correct and does not convey a clear meaning in written English.
It may be intended to describe something that is enjoyable or entertaining, but it lacks clarity and proper context. Example: "The event, which has fun activities planned, is sure to attract a large crowd."
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Why not present them with this Madeira cake instead, which has fun decoration that is bound to give them a good giggle?
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Your article, which had fun with the idea that Business 2.0 portrayed Jeffrey K. Skilling of Enron as a revolutionary in September, might have cited our September cover article, "Enron's Burnout," which questioned whether Enron would survive.
A pitch-black series of sketches, monologues and radio "stings", which had fun at the expense of DJs such as Chris Moyles and Jo Whiley, Blue Jam largely avoided controversy because it went out almost unnoticed, broadcast in the early hours of the morning.
Two exceptions were Doug Liman's Go (featuring Katie Holmes, Sarah Polley and Scott Wolf), which had fun with the LA warehouse party scene, and Blade, whose great bloody opening (to the Pump Panel Reconstruction Mix of New Order's Confusion, trackspotters) was the last word in clubbing exclusivity.
"This is a typically goofy Denver fight," said Patricia Calhoun, editor of the city's feisty weekly newspaper, Westword, which has had fun at the expense of all parties to the matter.
We have this ability to fudge the line a little bit, which has been fun to play with.
When it's raining, I get my fix at Lee Valley VeloPark, which has a fun all-weather circuit.
We've been travelling around a lot for the last 10 years, living out of our car, off and on, which has been fun but it also throws you out of your routine.
Which has been fun, but obviously where the rubber really hits the road (pun most emphatically intended) is when the products start showing up in the real world.
Germany's tourism bureau (which has the fun-sounding name of the Federal Ministry of Economics and Technology) has launched a campaign to entice Britons — not a traditionally Teutonophilic demographic — to spend their holidays in the land of forests and beer.
By Lauren Collins July 26 , 2010Germany's tourism bureau (which has the fun-sounding name of the Federal Ministry of Economics and Technology) has launched a campaign to entice Britons — not a traditionally Teutonophilic demographic — to spend their holidays in the land of forests and beer.
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