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Words & Wordplay - September 2006

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

seventeen years??

2006-09-27 12:57:22 · 4 answers · asked by rod_dollente 5

butt mye spelinng abosulooterly metickulous ie:krisanthemumn<100%

2006-09-27 12:45:08 · 9 answers · asked by Anonymous

Was it ever common practice in the past?

2006-09-27 12:25:22 · 23 answers · asked by Anonymous

does it mean what it literally says?

2006-09-27 12:16:49 · 9 answers · asked by Anonymous

2006-09-27 11:40:38 · 26 answers · asked by tony c 1

0

How would you explain the setting?
where should I put it?
Is it Ok to say this story takes place in...?

College paper!

2006-09-27 11:28:39 · 1 answers · asked by PCM 3

Give me examples of words/sentences in clipped format.

2006-09-27 10:27:45 · 2 answers · asked by purple_a2001 1

2006-09-27 10:14:59 · 3 answers · asked by britt 1

if you know,what is a:
1 language speaker
2 language speaker
3 language speaker
4 language speaker

And so on..........

how high can you go up to?

2006-09-27 09:56:24 · 15 answers · asked by luv_greenday_person 2

in sports we pronounce it 'deefence'
in military terms it is 'difense'

2006-09-27 09:43:08 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous

1

OK I would like to say the phrase

"I AIR on the side of sensibility"

How do I spell THAT air?

2006-09-27 09:40:45 · 5 answers · asked by Jeremy K 1

There's a nutcase on Yahoo Answers called 'Jagshemesh' and he's earned the nickname 'Borat' by some participants from Yahoo Answers.

If you type 'Do American women find Kasakhstan men nice' into the Search for questions box, you will find Jagshemesh and his nutty questions.

2006-09-27 09:09:57 · 4 answers · asked by Strawberry_Lynn 5

Are there any words that don't have a vowel in them I thought the area under a cliff was but I don't know what the word is

2006-09-27 08:44:45 · 9 answers · asked by yankeeman0693 1

i'm sure there must be sxome technical name for a book going back and forth between the past and the present (see fried green tomatoes) does anyone happen to know what it is??

2006-09-27 08:44:43 · 5 answers · asked by fezowez89 2

2006-09-27 07:28:16 · 11 answers · asked by Shalimaar 3

2006-09-27 07:20:48 · 5 answers · asked by Shalimaar 3

2006-09-27 07:18:49 · 3 answers · asked by bobcathan 1

I am an anal speller and drive people nuts pointing out mistakes. My adult kids, my hubby, and my 11 year old granddaughter suck at spelling. How can they be helped especially my granddaughter?

2006-09-27 07:08:46 · 4 answers · asked by AKA FrogButt 7

Never return to a BLANK firework.
Un-gone-off?

2006-09-27 06:37:45 · 29 answers · asked by Druidus 5

It is a french word and I would like to know the meanning of it.

2006-09-27 06:20:56 · 4 answers · asked by filan4254 1

2006-09-27 05:54:03 · 6 answers · asked by Madam Rosmerta 5

The standard explanation is that it means something like:

I concur wholeheartedly my African-American brother

But for some reason, I think theres a hidden message, and it unfairly excludes whites.

2006-09-27 05:20:30 · 5 answers · asked by college_republicans_club 2

Is it a Hindu or a Punjabi word.

2006-09-27 05:10:28 · 9 answers · asked by Rainbow 4

2006-09-27 05:02:30 · 9 answers · asked by Prasanth V 1

It has always bugged me when my friends ask me, "Hey, do you want to drink some beers tonight?"

I think that "beer" would be like the noun "deer" in plural form (Look at all the deer. Not: Look at all the deers.) However, the argument is made that it is incorrect to say, "I drank nine beer tonight."

So does anyone know the correct plural form of "beer"?

2006-09-27 04:52:40 · 15 answers · asked by jenbabe705 1

2006-09-27 04:39:01 · 6 answers · asked by Abel 1

i heard 2 people in a conversation on ths bus, wanting to be tea baged, what is it??

2006-09-27 04:38:40 · 9 answers · asked by Anonymous

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