User:Thelolcamel/Sandbox

'shawn shawn shawn shawn shawn shawn shawn shawn shawn shawn shawn shawn shawn shawn shawn shawn' is a sentence formed by Dundonian students Samuel Burrows and Sean Tyrrel with punctuation marks removed and all spellings of the sound 'sean', 'shh! on.', 'shone', etc, have been reduced to the phonetic spelling of the word.

This was inspired by Samuel's previous sentence 'an-droo an-droo an-droo an-droo', again phonetically spelled, referring to a woman called Ann who drew a picture of Andrew, Rhuaridh, and Ripper Roo from Crash Bandicoot: 'Ann drew Andrew and Rhu and Roo'

The purpose of 'shawn shawn shawn shawn shawn shawn shawn shawn shawn shawn shawn shawn shawn shawn shawn shawn' is to highlight the ambiguity of such a sentence, since anybody challenged to find sense in this sentence by applying punctuation and distinguishing which shawn is which, is infinitesimally unlikely to arrive at the same meaning as Samuel and Sean did.