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Words & Wordplay - November 2006

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

2006-11-06 06:52:23 · 6 answers · asked by tdcburbank 1

Why does our nose run and our feet smell?

2006-11-06 06:24:13 · 2 answers · asked by Celeste P 7

It means to let rip or pass wind in UK, what commonly used terms would be applicable when in States?

2006-11-06 06:20:44 · 28 answers · asked by SunGod 4

2006-11-06 06:19:11 · 3 answers · asked by mactheis 1

2006-11-06 05:53:08 · 44 answers · asked by smac1 2

2006-11-06 05:49:03 · 7 answers · asked by KEL971 2

2006-11-06 05:45:49 · 2 answers · asked by Robert L 1

2006-11-06 04:51:04 · 4 answers · asked by Unknown 1

and BELOVED is 3 syllables?

2006-11-06 04:44:54 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous

2006-11-06 04:27:48 · 7 answers · asked by santosh kumar s 1

2006-11-06 04:21:50 · 22 answers · asked by gerryhead 3

Should it be like "MEKDONALD" or like "MUKDONALD"

2006-11-06 04:14:19 · 22 answers · asked by jikg 3

oefenings

2006-11-06 04:11:39 · 1 answers · asked by maria l 1

2006-11-06 04:05:54 · 3 answers · asked by Anonymous

im canadian and i say it but why? it sounds so stupid!!
have you heard the word lark?
flack?

2006-11-06 04:04:50 · 8 answers · asked by rwilson1684 1

2006-11-06 03:54:27 · 21 answers · asked by leemoll82 1

Hello, I was talking with your sales maneger. Then I got _____ .

A) reconnected
B) unconnected
C) disconnected
Thanks

2006-11-06 03:39:48 · 17 answers · asked by carbonkid22 2

2006-11-06 03:14:39 · 5 answers · asked by Miss D 7

Girl asked a man on first night of joy. "is it in?"; when he is on his best endeavour.

2006-11-06 03:11:50 · 4 answers · asked by lookgood2006 c 1

I was having a conversation with someone and they used this saying to describe the person we were talking about

2006-11-06 03:06:18 · 8 answers · asked by word 2

"A reverend and a pirate share a name. What will you plant in their honour?"
It might be a pun or word-game, or it might be trivia I'm not getting. It has a cryptic crossword feel to it; the author is British. It should be a word or a phrase.

I don't have a word length (it's a riddle, not a crossword - previous riddles have been as short as a 4-letter word and as long as a 23-letter phrase). I've tried most basic plants, but I think it's a word-game I'm just not quite getting. It's also not 'privet' which I thought would be right. It's also not 'cotton'.

2006-11-06 03:01:31 · 4 answers · asked by Cobalt 4

unscramble DTGLIUIAE

2006-11-06 02:45:53 · 5 answers · asked by L M 1

2006-11-06 02:40:52 · 10 answers · asked by Anonymous

I know there are probably a lot of people who do not have English as their first language and I don't mean to offend anyone, but it does make me chuckle now and then!

2006-11-06 02:35:58 · 31 answers · asked by flossy 2

2006-11-06 02:35:47 · 22 answers · asked by vipin b 2

everybody seems to be using the word in their answers

2006-11-06 02:31:34 · 23 answers · asked by Kria 3

There are many piles of shoes on the ground

2006-11-06 02:23:33 · 6 answers · asked by prettynat 1

2006-11-06 02:19:35 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous

They filter out words like *****, ****, **** and all those things that just appear to you as asterisks as you read this. Ok so we can assume that americans have all those things in their hallowed land and a few things that the english speaking world doesn't confer a highly negative connotation on, like F-A-G. (in english english, this is slang for a cigarette, not a bum-bandit).
So why don't they fiter the word "bollocks"? Don't they have any?

2006-11-06 02:17:32 · 13 answers · asked by Anonymous

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