He threw me a rope clumsily VS He threw a clumsy rope to me ?

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Polyester

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He threw me a rope clumsily.

VS

He threw a clumsy rope to me.

Which one is correct?
OR
Are both wrong?
 

Matthew Wai

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If you mean the movement of 'threw' was clumsy, then use the adverb 'clumsily'.

Not a teacher.
 

Roman55

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I am not a teacher.

Polyester, if you've looked up 'clumsy' in the dictionary and found something like this, 'Difficult to handle or use; unwieldy' you could be mistaken for thinking that a rope could be clumsy, but that would not sound natural at all. If that is the sense you were after, you should use 'unwieldy'. If not, follow Matthew's advice.
 

Polyester

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So, no.1 is correct?
 

Matthew Wai

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I think so, but I am not a teacher.
 

emsr2d2

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I would use "He clumsily threw me a rope".
 

tedmc

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The adjective "awkard" usually goes with situations rather than things.

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BobK

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Given the context of someone throwing you a rope, with the throw being smooth but the aim wrong (so that the catcher had to run and pick it up), 'awkward' might work - but it would sound a bit odd.

b
 

MikeNewYork

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Even in that context, "awkward rope" doesn't work.
 

BobK

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It depends what you mean by "work". It would make a kind of sense to me, by analogy with expressions like "there was a guilty sweet-wrapper on the floor" - where the adjective really refers to the person who dropped it.. :) (Maybe this sort of anthropomorphhism is more common this side of The Pond.)

b
 
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