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Words & Wordplay - October 2006

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

Ex. the employee has had excessive absences' (sp?)

2006-10-16 09:32:44 · 11 answers · asked by marshmallow 2

2006-10-16 09:26:22 · 6 answers · asked by k1ng_koopa713 3

Could be Russian. The word in a sentence..."You are the good/pleasant interlocutor.

2006-10-16 08:58:07 · 11 answers · asked by ? 1

We have to send a gift to a friend. At the bottom of the gift card, we wrote down "From the Smith family". I know that this is correct. But what about "From the Smiths", is that correct too?

2006-10-16 08:57:33 · 5 answers · asked by chingching 1

How would you discribe passion? how would you paint it, or dance it. I know it means ardor, love, but much more. does it mean that you feel so much, you couold die for it? So is suicide an act of passion?

2006-10-16 08:47:44 · 4 answers · asked by NY Lady 5

When someone says that you are very intellectual, what does this mean?

2006-10-16 08:44:30 · 2 answers · asked by Rachel S 1

scar with d on it somewhere cause if u spell it like "scared" than it looks like ur scared of something.

2006-10-16 08:33:47 · 5 answers · asked by Josh 3

2006-10-16 08:29:11 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous

2006-10-16 08:28:19 · 11 answers · asked by Lespaul 3

Who began replacing it with 'u'? as in the f-word and more importantly, as in luck and up. Luck has nothing worthwhile to do with optimism, and it is done in an optimistic pretence. You can almost feel the orgasm at the sound of these changes:
good = gud
Brooke = Bruck
brook = bruck
look = luck
book = buck
No doubt 'yuk' will become 'yook'. As in yooky croaky voices.

2006-10-16 07:50:28 · 26 answers · asked by Chris cc 1

2006-10-16 07:27:02 · 14 answers · asked by dancer_babe357 2

2006-10-16 07:18:36 · 9 answers · asked by madmax 1

Give information immediately

2006-10-16 07:05:59 · 23 answers · asked by Erica W 1

2006-10-16 07:04:35 · 3 answers · asked by blazzingred30 2

2006-10-16 07:04:16 · 15 answers · asked by boo boo 2

2006-10-16 06:09:21 · 1 answers · asked by eskay 1

As far as I can find, both spellings are correct. Is one american and one british? and which is which?

2006-10-16 05:12:03 · 9 answers · asked by artisticallyderanged 4

2006-10-16 04:52:28 · 5 answers · asked by NORMAN D 1

2006-10-16 04:46:36 · 8 answers · asked by amkrishna1957 1

I speak to people from all over the country at my job and I just got off the phone with an older gentleman who gave me his address and pronounced the state Missurah. I have heard it said this way quite a few times before. Is this typically how it is pronounced by residents?

2006-10-16 04:38:14 · 5 answers · asked by Justme 4

2006-10-16 04:17:05 · 7 answers · asked by t_bone 1

2006-10-16 03:57:47 · 9 answers · asked by Richard K 2

For example, what's the proper way of writing the phrase "hook line and sinker?"

A) hook, line and sinker
B) hook, line, and sinker

Would the number of items being enumerated affect the punctuation?

2006-10-16 03:52:09 · 12 answers · asked by walrus carpenter 3

top to bottom how to speak english

2006-10-16 03:42:25 · 7 answers · asked by Rajini V 1

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have you perfected your evil laugh yet?

2006-10-16 03:40:09 · 12 answers · asked by Beth G 1

2006-10-16 03:35:12 · 40 answers · asked by Anonymous

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