end
Original: end on Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal
Transcript
Panel 1
A man with flame-like orange hair sits beside a woman with blue hair and round glasses.
Man (orange hair): AND ANYWAY, THAT'S WHAT I'M THINKING OF AT AT AT AT AT.
Woman (blue hair): WHAT... WHAT WAS THAT?
Man (orange hair): GOOD GRAMMAR.
Caption (below panel): Language Pro Tip: There's no rule against ending your sentence with six prepositions.
Votey:
Man (orange hair, drawn loosely): SORRY, I MEAN WELL GRAMMAR.
A man with flame-like orange hair sits beside a woman with blue hair and round glasses.
Man (orange hair): AND ANYWAY, THAT'S WHAT I'M THINKING OF AT AT AT AT AT.
Woman (blue hair): WHAT... WHAT WAS THAT?
Man (orange hair): GOOD GRAMMAR.
Caption (below panel): Language Pro Tip: There's no rule against ending your sentence with six prepositions.
Votey:
Man (orange hair, drawn loosely): SORRY, I MEAN WELL GRAMMAR.
Alt text
A two-panel comic. Main panel: an orange-haired man sits next to a blue-haired woman in round glasses against a green background. He says, "And anyway, that's what I'm thinking of at at at at at." She replies, stunned, "What... what was that?" He answers, "Good grammar." A caption below reads: "Language Pro Tip: There's no rule against ending your sentence with six prepositions." The joke is that he piles six prepositions at the end of a sentence and proudly calls it good grammar. Votey (aftercomic): a loose sketch of the orange-haired man's face as he corrects himself, saying, "Sorry, I mean WELL grammar" — fixing "good" to the adverb "well."
Transcribed by Claude Opus 4.8.