Kitchen Pipe Trouble: A Tough Cleanup Task
What I Said:
The kitchen pipe has been blocked from yesterday. I could do nothing because I wasn’t able to clear it up without any tools. Today, after I dropped the clean materials into the pipe, it looked working. But the impact was very limited. I tried to stress up-down using a plugin of the sink. Finally, water can flush fine. The surprise was that the pipe blocked again at the evening, since the plate washer worked. So I realized that the blocked things were not only in the trunk, but also in all branches. It might be spent more time to clean up.
ChatGPT’s Revision:
The kitchen pipe has been blocked since yesterday, and I couldn’t clear it up without any tools. Today, I tried using some cleaning materials, and it seemed to help, but only a little. I also used the sink plunger to push up and down, and finally, the water started flowing properly. But in the evening, after the dishwasher ran, the pipe got blocked again. I realized the problem wasn’t just in the main trunk but also in the branch pipes. Looks like it’ll take more time to fully clean it up.
Fixes and Explanations:
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“has been blocked from yesterday” → “has been blocked since yesterday”
“Since yesterday” is the correct expression for this context.
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“I could do nothing because I wasn’t able to clear it up without any tools” → “and I couldn’t clear it up without any tools”
Simplified for smoother flow.
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“after I dropped the clean materials into the pipe, it looked working” → “I tried using some cleaning materials, and it seemed to help”
Rephrased for grammatical accuracy and natural phrasing.
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“I tried to stress up-down using a plugin of the sink” → “I also used the sink plunger to push up and down”
Corrected “plugin of the sink” to “sink plunger” for proper terminology.
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“The surprise was that the pipe blocked again at the evening, since the plate washer worked” → “But in the evening, after the dishwasher ran, the pipe got blocked again”
Simplified for clarity and to match the conversational tone.
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“the blocked things were not only in the trunk, but also in all branches” → “the problem wasn’t just in the main trunk but also in the branch pipes”
Rephrased for clarity and accuracy.
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“It might be spent more time to clean up” → “Looks like it’ll take more time to fully clean it up”
Adjusted phrasing for grammatical correctness and fluency.