I listend to one of nicest song to my heart by Rihhana all the time but i could not figured out wht she mean when saying
Stupid in love Oh Stupid in love Let me tell you something
Never have I ever Been a size 10 In my whole life.. I left the enging running
i wana know wht she mean by a size 10 and wht the idea behind her saying that she left the engin running
A 'size 10' is a person who wears size 10 clothes - often thought to be attractively slim. - Leona Lewis detoxes down to a size 10 and says, 'I love it when people tell me I've lost weight!' | Mail Online
ok i know this ,but wht the connotation she wanted to tell her boyffriend
it is ok ,someone else would help me
***** NOT A TEACHER *****
(1) I am an old man who knows nothing about this kind of music, but I googled and
found a discussion that may interest you. Some people claim to know what those
lines mean.
(2) I am not smart enough to link, so please go to Google and type:
UKMIX - Forum - Rihanna - left the engine running - Loud era
(3) I think that the moderators will let me recommend this link, for I read some of the
posts, and they did not contain any bad words. All the posters seemed to take this
kind of music very seriously.
Long ago, I stopped trying to understand what songs mean. I got that she means she's never been slender. What she means by keeping the engine revving is anyone's guess.
The link I got when I entered those search terms did not help me at all. Sorry.
I'm not a teacher, but I write for a living. Please don't ask me about 2nd conditionals, but I'm a safe bet for what reads well in (American) English.
Okay, I read the lyrics to the song.
My guess is that she thought the conversation with her boyfriend would be so short (he would lie, she would know it, and the conversation (and the relationship) would be over very quickly) that she didn't even bother to turn the car off. She left the engine running because she'd be back in her car and driving away in a matter of minutes.
I'm not a teacher, but I write for a living. Please don't ask me about 2nd conditionals, but I'm a safe bet for what reads well in (American) English.