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What is this?
"Whoulda thunk there was more than 1 way to take a rest from training and allow your body sufficient time to recover?"
What is "whoulda thunk"? Is it "Would have thought" but wrote it wrong on purpose? Think thunk thunk? Whoulda > woulda > would have?
Apr 12, 2020 1:32 AM
Answers · 4
Thunk is used as a pseudo-archaic past participle of think (by analogy with drink/drunk.)
http://www.macmillandictionaryblog.com/whod-a-thunk-it
The formal definition is here,
https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/who-would-ve-thunk-it
April 12, 2020
Hey Tiger. You almost got it right. You have a really tricky sentence there.
"Whoulda" is a contraction of "who would have." "Thunk," in this context, is really informal way to say "thought." So the sentence could also read "Who would have thought..."
It's a phrase I might use in a Facebook post or a text to a friend. I wouldn't use it, however, in a business memo or a professional document.
April 12, 2020
You are correct.
Trying to sound uneducated and with a "rural" accent, probably.
Could be sarcasm.
April 12, 2020
It's basically short / slang for "who would have thought"
April 12, 2020
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