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I'm confused about the expression 'in twain'. I always thought it meant 'asunder', in two pieces. But recently I've read it in context several times where the writer seems to mean something like 'as a pair', 'together', 'in agreement with each other.'
If you read a sentence like 'The president and his vice are in twain' (and no contextual clues), how would you spontaneously interpret that? From a purely linguistical point of view; nevermind the politics.
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