Aw baby I thought you said I was perfect, that sucks.
Heh.
2007-11-13 13:24:01
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Who says there is no such thing as perfect? There are examples of it everywhere. Don't confuse perfection with being perfect in every respect. A person can have a perfect score on a test, or have perfect pitch in music, and stink at something else. The idea is to select the one thing that makes you happy, and practice until you can be the best you can be at it... which does not rule out perfect.
2007-11-13 13:27:34
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answer #2
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answered by SNPUC2 3
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This is an incredibly stupid question. So I will give you an equally stupid answer. Instead of saying practice is perfect, you could say, instead:
If Practice is the X axis and Imperfect is the Y axis, then, if you were to graph the correlatives of both, you would find that the higher the correlative of practice, the lower would be the correlative of Imperfect, such that when the correlative of Practice approaches Infinity, the correlative of Imperfection approaches zero.
2007-11-13 13:36:33
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answer #3
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answered by Anpadh 6
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Of course there is Perfect.....just not in another Human Being that is reserved only for Jesus...
. In the things we do we strive to do the very best we can do and in our eyes that goal is perfect when completed. Or we have to practice until it is perfect. Making a dress, fixing a car, mowing a lawn, baking a loaf of bread, painting a wall, fixing a toilet leak, (if the toilet still leaks keep practicing it shouldn't leak if perfectly fixed)These can all be done to PERFECT. If not keep practicing.
Example: You write an essay, the teacher corrects the punctuation, you re-write the essay with the changed punctuation. This paper would be perfect by your Teacher's own personal standards, simply because she already made notations for the perfect punctuation.
2007-11-13 13:09:16
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answer #4
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answered by Toffy 6
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If there is no such thing as "perfect", why is it that many people have a 4.00 GPA or can achieve a 100 on an exam???
2007-11-13 13:04:37
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answer #5
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answered by im_always_drunk 2
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It's an expression to say that you have to practice in order to be perfect, but since you keep practising and perfect is still 'just ahead' of you, that means the expression also means to say "never stop practising"
2007-11-13 17:10:14
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answer #6
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answered by qazxcv679 2
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Perfect is getting the hoped for result with a minimum of error.
Perfect is being within the required tolerance. Occam's razor applies to questions too.
2007-11-13 14:39:51
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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The point is to always do your best to get as close as possible or maybe set a new standard for perfection!
2007-11-13 13:04:03
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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That's like asking if everyone is rude and a jerk to people they don't know, then what is the point of common courtesy on your part?
I guess the answer is that with out striving for prefection we will never find happiness.
2007-11-13 13:22:34
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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r u emo or sumthing?? Yeah theres no such thing as perfect but there IS such a thing as really really good!
2007-11-13 13:06:11
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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"practice makes perfect" is just a saying it is not really true. but it does mean that by practicing something you will get better and maybe close to perfect.
2007-11-13 13:00:21
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answer #11
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answered by 3.14=Pi 1
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