Question: what does “You had better leave,” mean?

Question: what does “You had better leave,” mean?

Sharing is caring!

Sometimes as a writer, I come across a phrase or maybe a sentence or two of interest. I wonder what the writer meant the reader should think of them and was the writer successful. I was reading a story about two single young adults who had been friends since childhood. They had been at a party, and the woman’s ride home, another woman, had indulged in too much liquor. Because of that, the man drives her home and they are sitting outside her apartment talking. The woman says these two things – “You had better leave. Before we wake up regretting what we’ve done.”

What do you think the author meant for the reader to think about those two sentences and the characters? Drop me a note using the comment section below or use the “Contact Me” button above. I’ll give you a chance to think about your reply. On Friday morning, I will post what happens to the two characters in the story.

Share:

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Print

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

VC

” I am a writer and as a writer, I do not neatly fit into any category. I have written magazine articles, feature news articles, restaurant reviews, a newspaper column, and several book length nonfiction projects aimed at people interested in particular health problems for foundations and companies. As to novels, I have published some Kindle novels.”