Grammar

<p>Is this grammatically correct:
Eat and drink simple</p>

<p>give more context...I don't even understand what you're trying to say...</p>

<p>do you mean...eat and drink simply...? (I don't think that's proper parallelism...not sure)
because both of those are verbs so you need an adverb(s) (usually ending in -ly) to modify them.
clarify that though...make the fragment a sentence so we can see what you mean by it</p>

<p>i think it is correct.
it is proper parallelism, because you only have two things to compare correct?</p>

<p>I don't think there is such a thing as being "grammatically correct". What you should ask is, "is this proper usage"?</p>

<p>Basically Im making a logo for a tshirt. the logo is "Drink and Eat simply" Is "Drink and Eat Simple" correct as well?</p>

<p>I think you need an adverb </p>

<p>Newbyreborn...I don't know about the parallelism because it technically should be..
drink simply and eat simply or something to that effect...because you need an adverb for each of the verbs. Right now the simply only technically applies to the eat.</p>

<p>Just my opinion though...I might not be completely right.</p>

<p>I'm pretty sure it has to be "Eat and drink simply"...if you have two verbs, you need the adverb to modify them</p>

<p>Yeah, you need an adverb. Just don't put a period at the end of that phrase, or you'll get a sentence fragment :X</p>