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Words & Wordplay - July 2006

[Selected]: All categories Education & Reference Words & Wordplay

a. Shoehorn
b. Brussels Sprouts
c. Laptop
d Slime
e. Couch
f. Medusa

Explain your answer. And then make a sentence using all the words

2006-07-21 09:53:31 · 18 answers · asked by Alice Chaos 6

you go to a restaurant and basically order for some food... What would be the correct way to say it:

2 chicken wraps , plz or 2 chicken wrap ,plz ?

what would it be if you ordered something like rice... and say, u need 2 plates of it.

explaining the underlying grammar helps...
thanks...

2006-07-21 09:49:31 · 6 answers · asked by bio4susant 1

2006-07-21 09:33:02 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous

2006-07-21 09:06:14 · 20 answers · asked by lolipop 3

which one is correct?

2006-07-21 08:55:51 · 7 answers · asked by mikeclassof09 2

Please explain. Thank you.

2006-07-21 08:51:58 · 49 answers · asked by ♥Ms. Heart♥ 5

Yes, it's a really silly question. :)

2006-07-21 08:43:58 · 9 answers · asked by reluctant 3

2006-07-21 08:43:56 · 10 answers · asked by Yzma 3

19

im bored so you can have 2 more points

2006-07-21 08:27:01 · 34 answers · asked by cmfoxy890 1

I've got to fill in a form and I don't want to look like an idiot!

2006-07-21 08:20:35 · 20 answers · asked by madge_ure 1

Im Mozehhoo from Uganda,East Africa.

2006-07-21 08:01:20 · 21 answers · asked by Stopee hoo 1

I know the rest of them. And how do you pronounce asterkist or whatever this (*) is? And what are the differences between these two: { [ ] }. Thank you.

2006-07-21 08:01:09 · 8 answers · asked by ♥Ms. Heart♥ 5

I am in "The Sound of Music" at my local theater. I am one of the nuns and we have several songs to sing. The trouble is, all but one is in Latin and I would really like to know what I am singing. Can you translate?

1st song:
Donec ponam inimicos tuos, scabellum pedum tuorum. Detorente in via bibet, propterea exaltabit caput.
Sicut erat in principio, et nunc et, semper, et in saecula saeculorum. Amen.

2nd song:
Rex admirabilis et triumphator nobilis, dulcedo in effabilis, in effabilis, totus desiderabilis, totu desiderabilis.

3rd song:
Gaudeamus gaudeamus omnes in domino diem festum celebrantes.

Last song:
Confitemini Domino quoniam bonus, quoniam bonus, quoniam in saeculum misericordia ejus.

I typed this directly from my music. Can you help?

2006-07-21 07:11:51 · 8 answers · asked by jmwest 3

I'm trying to figures out how you write the possessive for Massachusetts... I guess I don't remember the "rule" for using just an apostrophe or an apostrophe "s" after words that end in "s".

2006-07-21 07:00:51 · 13 answers · asked by Anonymous

If i or someone said that im impulsive, what does that mean about me?

2006-07-21 06:53:55 · 12 answers · asked by I like Your hairspray 1

2006-07-21 06:25:36 · 10 answers · asked by javid_23 1

Ahh....am confused! Which one is correct english?

2006-07-21 06:18:30 · 7 answers · asked by ? 6

2006-07-21 05:58:16 · 17 answers · asked by Anonymous

A.D.I.D.A.S. is a good one what. It describes a shoe brand and it means "All Day I Dream About Sex"

Tell me one different from this one and a response that has been given. Above yours!

2006-07-21 05:52:19 · 3 answers · asked by face of revenge 2

2006-07-21 05:43:21 · 10 answers · asked by Tess 1

Who decides it's Holy???? Do they vote on it?

2006-07-21 05:39:19 · 3 answers · asked by Mike 3

I mean the feature is right there, half the time I can't answer the question because the words are misspelled. I can't decide what they are asking or answering.

2006-07-21 05:02:55 · 9 answers · asked by Kipper 6

I've seen musings re: Jolly Roger that it was an English corruption of French phrase "joli rouge" (an ironic reference to bloodsoaked flags supposedly flown by early buccaneers). Perhaps "jolly" has a specifically nautical nuance; e.g., certain small boats carried by larger ships were known as "jolly boats." [How old is the phrase "Jolly Roger" anyway? Is it possible that Howard Pyle invented it in his 20th C. Book of Pirates?] Why do I suspect there may be a connection between the 2 Rogers? As is well known, the main obligation of any pirate gang was to pillage mercilessly. Unhappily, most pirates possessed very low moral character. Like Mary's Little Lamb, where ever pillage went, rapine was sure to go. Not much of a jump to the Victorian slang term, with its unavoidable connotation of vigorous male action. Person A was said to "roger" Person B, who was described as having been "rogered" by Person A.

2006-07-21 04:42:49 · 1 answers · asked by buffalobjf 2

2006-07-21 04:11:20 · 18 answers · asked by shahyad 1

I think the same mean.

2006-07-21 04:08:31 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous

I think the same mean.

2006-07-21 04:07:25 · 7 answers · asked by Anonymous

clackervalve. 10 points to the 1st person or the closest

2006-07-21 03:50:40 · 22 answers · asked by wtfnmy22 3

something more respectable

2006-07-21 03:03:04 · 9 answers · asked by Anonymous

so bitcy about the people that mispell??WHO CARES??nearly everyone nowdays writes in txt launguage.it dosent make you any less of a person or an idiot just because your not spelling properley!!grow up people!!

2006-07-21 02:47:09 · 15 answers · asked by ibiza_shandy_pink 2

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