I need a word.

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Comments

  • edited November 2009
    Engulfed Urban upstart for being a teachers pet, just because he watches Star Trek and Anomoly is the second most used word after Plasma !
  • edited November 2009
    The Antithesis of the Superfluous Blancmange Flavoured Lozenge, of obsequious tendencies?
    Calling all ASCII Art Architects Visit the WOS Wall of Text and contribute: https://www.yourworldoftext.com/wos
  • edited November 2009
    Mother nature calls it quits, defies logic, weathers it off, decides a come-back, most grandiose, all succumb to a downpour of haddock and giraffes, all bets are off, bugrit, millennium hand an' shrimp...
  • edited November 2009
    ...and the illegal fustigation of chicken tenders thus resulting in a cromulent embiggening of said Giraffe storm minus several of the afforementioned haddock?

    .....carry on!
    Every night is curry night!
  • edited November 2009
    Quite right, quite right ... and in supplication to those off-shore, I am reminded of that piece in the newspaper about the meandering miasma of multitudinous millennialists, may they forever roam the high seas and the low ponds, but where may they eventually be heading, pray tell.
  • edited November 2009
    They may be going to Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch. I've heard it's nice at this time of year with not even as much rain as summertime, and it's less depressing than Abergavenny.
    Every night is curry night!
  • edited November 2009
    "James while John had had had had had had had had had had had a better effect on the teacher" is an English sentence used to demonstrate lexical ambiguity and the necessity of punctuation, which serves as a substitute for the intonation, stress and pauses found in human speech.

    James, while John had had "had", had had "had had";
    "had had" had had a better effect on the teacher.

    A similar example describes a sign for "Fish and chips", with an observer—pointing out that the words in the sign were not evenly spaced—saying, "The gaps between 'Fish' and 'and' and 'and' and 'chips' are unequal."
  • edited November 2009
    Wellies are favourable to wet feet, as preventative measures thereof, that is. And yet the gentle underside of the taxman's heel crushes the moss of our cottage, he is fast making his illegal advances through the first barrier. May the Doom of Unforgivable Consequences fall upon him as he is well met by the master's dog. He ought to have worn his wellies, what with the weather as it is.
  • edited November 2009
    frobush wrote: »
    "James while John had had had had had had had had had had had a better effect on the teacher" is an English sentence used to demonstrate lexical ambiguity and the necessity of punctuation, which serves as a substitute for the intonation, stress and pauses found in human speech.

    MP3 please?
  • edited November 2009
    The fool!

    He deserves everything he invites upon himself!
    Every night is curry night!
  • edited November 2009
    The fool!

    He deserves everything he invites upon himself!

    Agreed wholly and wooly ... may the Mammoth of Stompingness meet him at the threshold of my door.
  • edited November 2009
    there's too much space between Smith and And and And and Son
  • edited November 2009
    guesser wrote: »
    there's too much space between Smith and And and And and Son

    I think they may not be completely unrelated to each other's relatives, though not immediately related to each other.
  • edited November 2009
  • edited November 2009
    'Ass backwards' would have been better.
  • edited November 2009
    beanz wrote: »
    'Ass backwards' would have been better.

    So, what you're saying is that you like what's-her-face from Alaska.
  • edited November 2009
    ZnorXman wrote: »
    So, what you're saying is that you like what's-her-face from Alaska.

    Only for sexual gratification
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