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Added image descriptions and made them display at a more reasonable size
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ColleenV
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enter image description herewooden track pieces

My little sister asked me to join the wooden track pieces (train) together, after a while, I found that she had spread the train tracks all across the floor.

You asked me to put these together and you've broken them already?

(Not literally "broken", I want it to mean that the track is broken; all the pieces of the track are spread all over the floor and not as a complete train's track)

What is a natural way to express their two bold words? ("Put together" And "Break")

And if it is not spread all over the floor, it's something like this:

enter image description herepartially assembled wooden track pieces

enter image description here

My little sister asked me to join the wooden track pieces (train) together, after a while, I found that she had spread the train tracks all across the floor.

You asked me to put these together and you've broken them already?

(Not literally "broken", I want it to mean that the track is broken; all the pieces of the track are spread all over the floor and not as a complete train's track)

What is a natural way to express their two bold words? ("Put together" And "Break")

And if it is not spread all over the floor, it's something like this:

enter image description here

wooden track pieces

My little sister asked me to join the wooden track pieces (train) together, after a while, I found that she had spread the train tracks all across the floor.

You asked me to put these together and you've broken them already?

(Not literally "broken", I want it to mean that the track is broken; all the pieces of the track are spread all over the floor and not as a complete train's track)

What is a natural way to express their two bold words? ("Put together" And "Break")

And if it is not spread all over the floor, it's something like this:

partially assembled wooden track pieces

added 78 characters in body
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enter image description here

My little sister asked me to join the plastic trackswooden track pieces (train) together, after a while, I found that she had spread the train tracks all across the floor.

You asked me to put these together and you've broken them already?

(Not literally "broken", I want it to mean that the track is broken; all the pieces of the track are spread all over the floor and not as a complete train's track)

What is a natural way to express their two bold words? ("Put together" And "Break")

And if it is not spread all over the floor, it's something like this:

enter image description here

My little sister asked me to join the plastic tracks (train) together, after a while, I found that she had spread the train tracks all across the floor.

You asked me to put these together and you've broken them already?

(Not literally "broken", I want it to mean that the track is broken; all the pieces of the track are spread all over the floor and not as a complete train's track)

What is a natural way to express their two bold words? ("Put together" And "Break")

And if it is not spread all over the floor, it's something like this:

enter image description here

enter image description here

My little sister asked me to join the wooden track pieces (train) together, after a while, I found that she had spread the train tracks all across the floor.

You asked me to put these together and you've broken them already?

(Not literally "broken", I want it to mean that the track is broken; all the pieces of the track are spread all over the floor and not as a complete train's track)

What is a natural way to express their two bold words? ("Put together" And "Break")

And if it is not spread all over the floor, it's something like this:

enter image description here

added 78 characters in body
Source Link

My little sister asked me to join the plastic tracks (train) together, after a while, I found that she had spread the train tracks all across the floor.

You asked me to put these together and you've broken them already?

(Not literally "broken", I want it to mean that the track is broken; all the pieces of the track are spread all over the floor and not as a complete train's track)

What is a natural way to express their two bold words? ("Put together" And "Break")

And if it is not spread all over the floor, it's something like this:

enter image description here

My little sister asked me to join the plastic tracks (train) together, after a while, I found that she had spread the train tracks all across the floor.

You asked me to put these together and you've broken them already?

(Not literally "broken", I want it to mean that the track is broken; all the pieces of the track are spread all over the floor and not as a complete train's track)

What is a natural way to express their two bold words? ("Put together" And "Break")

My little sister asked me to join the plastic tracks (train) together, after a while, I found that she had spread the train tracks all across the floor.

You asked me to put these together and you've broken them already?

(Not literally "broken", I want it to mean that the track is broken; all the pieces of the track are spread all over the floor and not as a complete train's track)

What is a natural way to express their two bold words? ("Put together" And "Break")

And if it is not spread all over the floor, it's something like this:

enter image description here

Source Link
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