So maybe they took that construction wall down on the bridge way too early.
In the "construction update" video, they said it was opening in May. They never mentioned the year.
Project Madrid is gonna have issues with the switch track so right on que!
Are you asking "right on who!" or are you saying "right on Quebec!"
I ask becuase if the former, unless ,"who," is a proper noun this sentence is interogative and should end in a question mark. In the case of the later, If you meant, "Que," the abbrivation for Quebec then you should capitalize the word "que." In either case the sentence does not make much sense and you might consider a revision.
Hold on though... presuming for a moment that the "que" is Spanish, it translates to an interrogative "what" rather than "who." Same conclusion applies in this case: sentence should end with a question mark. But "que" also translates into the conjunction "that," implying that the sentence has simply been left incomplete, thus any sentence-ending punctuation in that specific location is inappropriate. And as a third possibility, "que" can also be the pronoun "that," which might be construed as a valid use if one squints just right and doesn't mind the extreme awkwardness of the phrasing (in the approximate spirit of "nice job pal!" or "you go girl!" or "right on Quebec!").
So madmax may be assembling that sentence correctly, or maybe incorrectly, or otherwise just needs to complete it with a subordinate clause before it can be evaluated.
It's such a relief to conclusively get to the bottom of something.
(We know...)Yes, I think he meant "cue."
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