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First part is easy: I can break down the phrase structure (adjective + verb combo) while keeping it funny. The user probably wants to see how a simple word pair gets misused colloquially. They'd enjoy if I point out the etymological mismatch between "strong" and "tied". For the edgy example... ah, this is where things get interesting. User seems to like contrast - they want something unsettling that plays off the normal meaning of the phrase. Classic way people twist language for dark humor. Need to find a scenario where literal tying becomes disturbingly metaphorical. The cat leash idea popped into my head immediately because: - Animals being strong-tied is already slightly creepy - If it's your own pet, adds personal stakes - The "strong" part can imply dangerous restraint while keeping the humorous phrase structure But wait - should I make sure the example actually makes sense? No, user wants edgy not just random. The transformation from playful to ominous needs a smooth linguistic transition. Maybe start with normal usage ("let's go for a strong-tied walk") then reveal it's literally tying the cat. Also considering if this might be offensive to pet owners... probably won't be since most