Mia Kang





Conclusion and Findings



| After / during / in / before / when / during / at any other time / after / in the days and weeks following / during / during / on the early morning / that night |


I HELD OUT


                                                            (not clamped)


UNTIL I FOUND


OUT


            Con-
                        completely, Latin


            + claudere
                                    to shut                          (not clamped)


                                                                                               
                        —Concludere
           
                       —Conclude                  convince, Middle English          
                                                                                                           thoroughly win over




            Con-
                        with


                        —Consensus                 feeling ‘with’ others




            Con
                        an argument or evidence in opposition


                        the negative position or one holding it



KNOW NO NO
NO KNOW NO
NO KNOW KNOW
KNOW NO KNOW



non-con
knock on
would you
wood ewe


in the days and weeks
in the days and weeks
in the days and weeks
in the days and weeks


considering received found put believe changed denied demonstrated taken believes had described believes believe kissed touched moved stimulating believes considered gyrating reach believe engaged lost dissipated feeling acknowledges say considered presumed notes said indicating said want respected told speaking threw stood questioned support feared slapped agree continued exchange initiate request invite snuggle culminating rescind believe found expressing agreed engaged agrees espouses stated discussed expressed wrote explained based support nurture respect believe concludes concludes engaging believes coerced engaging concludes




WELL-SPOKEN
WELL / WHEEL
SPOKE / END





a person who is afraid is a person who is afraid is a person who is afraid is a person who is afraid is a person a person a person a person

my person




is allowed to want what is allowed to want what is allowed to want what is allowed to want what is allowed to want what is to want is to what is to want is allowed

is what


THESE WERE CONSISTENT


I KNOW


a person is not a person is not a person is not a person is not a person is not a person is not a person is not a person is not a person is not a person is not is not is not


present participle / past participle / past / past participle / present / past / past / past participle / past participle / present / past / past participle / present / present / past / past / past / present participle / present / past participle / present participle / infinitive / present / past / past / past / present participle / present / present / past participle / past participle / present / past / present participle / past / past / past / past / present participle / past / past / past / present / past / past / present / past / infinitive / infinitive / infinitive / infinitive / infinitive / present participle / infinitive / present / past / present participle / past / past / present / present / past / past / past / past / past / past participle / infinitive / infinitive / infinitive / present / present / present / present participle / present / past participle / present / participle / present

participle: an English verbal form that has the function of an adjective and at the same time shows such verbal features as tense and voice and capacity to take an object

e.g. finish, done


I HELD OUT UNTIL


The participles are words that "take part" in two different word classes: that is, verb forms that can also act like adjectives ("the spoken word", "a moving experience")


AFTER / DURING / IN / BEFORE / WHEN / DURING / AFTER / BEFORE

WHEN / IN / I FOUND / out

what takes part takes apart apart apart apart apart apart apart


I WAS WELL-SPOKEN
AND VERBALLY SKILLED
I DO NOT BELIEVE
TODAY IS DIFFERENT