can u can a can as a canner can can a can
Can an English-speaking member from Canada please translate the above..., because I think if anyone can can a can, then a Canadian canner from a cannery in Canada can can a can best. Can do?
For those who like grammar, "can" is used in all of the above as:
- auxiliary verb (sometimes "modal") meaning something like "able"
- verb "to can" (not the bird "toucan", nor to be confused with the yellow "canary")
- noun, like a "tin can", and "cannery" too - and there is a dance called a "can-can"
- adjective "canny", something like "smart"
CAN you understand now?
You can can it in a can O_o
waaaaaaaaaaaaaauuuuuuuuuuuu...what u wrote .. i am not get it
Uncannily, I can uncan canny can-can canner cans. Can a canny can-can canner uncan a canny can-can canner can?