eleonora
''I am in the blast'' or ''I have a blast''? Hello everyone. I watched a tv-show yesterday and there was a competitor that said (probably) '' I am in the blast'' so I've taken a note of it and googled but I did't find any results. The only expression with BLAST was ''to have a blast''. So both are accetable or I just heard it wrong? thanks a lot ! ^_^
9 déc. 2014 18:53
Réponses · 6
1
I think you heard it wrong. The phrase "I am having a blast" is used. If I heard "I was in the blast" I would think that you were in an explosion.
9 décembre 2014
1
The expression is "I'm having a blast." In the past tense, it is "I had a blast." A related phrase is, "Aren't I a blast?" This phrase means the same thing as "Aren't I a lot of fun?" especially in the context of telling jokes or being the person at a party who is fun to hang out with. :)
9 décembre 2014
No, it isn't an alternative. 'I am in the blast' doesn't really mean anything. If you are sure that the first four words were definitely 'I am in the...' , then the last word probably wasn't 'blast'. Can you give us any more context, to help us guess what the word might be?
10 décembre 2014
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