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  • Friday, 20 September 2024
''Simplify Please,

''Simplify Please," Judges After Orengo Confused Them With Tough English

It is during this time that the renowned constitutional lawyer threw to the judges tough English rules hardly understandable by the bench. The judges unsuccessfully struggled to understand the lawyer until one of them had to tell Counsel Orengo to simplify. The rest of the court room was filled with giggles as they too tried to understand the now great Englishman.

Orengo was trying to explain how verbs, pronouns and nouns are interdependent in the structuring of the English language sentences.

"I want to share with you a matter of grammar. If you use a pronoun or noun before a verb and is followed by a noun, that verb is a function of the pronoun of the noun before the verb and the noun following the verb. But if you have a sentence that is broken thereafter you find a noun and another verb, it cannot relate to the noun and the pronoun that preceded the second verb. If you look at article 257, it is spoken in two parts the first is deliver, that is signatures. The second verb is to register," said senior counsel James Orengo in his final submission with the judge cutting in between with a plea, "simplify please."

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