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Words & Wordplay - February 2007

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

2007-02-01 06:04:58 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous

it dosent correct all and does not give a list of word spelling options to choose from

2007-02-01 05:58:43 · 4 answers · asked by Dick M 1

0

Which one is better Webster or Wikipedia.

2007-02-01 05:56:43 · 4 answers · asked by Country Girl 2

2007-02-01 05:50:02 · 29 answers · asked by Xx-ѕнιяℓєу-xX 2

not only but also correlative conjunctions

2007-02-01 05:45:12 · 4 answers · asked by canada562001 1

neither or nor corellative conjunctions

2007-02-01 05:42:28 · 6 answers · asked by canada562001 1

Some examples of words that are typed the same in an sms with the dictionary on are:
select, reject
lips, kiss
movies, mother
sound, round, pound
seats, recur
rudely, steely
blood, blond, clone, alone, aloof
rude, puff
Let's make ourselves immortal people!!!

2007-02-01 05:41:28 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous

frolic. i seen this on my paper but i aint sure what it means i forgot it says "frolic at the snow"
help pliz

2007-02-01 05:35:19 · 5 answers · asked by gaby16andibeliverbdisdabest 1

2007-02-01 05:33:34 · 8 answers · asked by sam2000 1

Spacial
1.5 = dedh
2.5 = dhaai
Rest
3.5 = saade teen
4.5 = saade chaar
and so on...

2007-02-01 05:22:09 · 5 answers · asked by Nimish A 3

2007-02-01 04:49:15 · 13 answers · asked by Anonymous

2007-02-01 04:47:16 · 12 answers · asked by ndrsfarkas 2

what is the rule for sight words? are they different because they have 2 vowels?

2007-02-01 04:44:16 · 3 answers · asked by hometeacher 2

2007-02-01 04:38:47 · 28 answers · asked by Me 5

I realise Basil Brushes annoying catch - phrase comes from victorian stage comedy, but what does it mean?

2007-02-01 04:22:36 · 8 answers · asked by kradrider 2

In Spanish there lots of double meaning names. Example Elena Nito which sounds normal but if you pronounce as El ena-Nito your saying THE MIDGET. Is there any names such as this one in English. Please share!!!

2007-02-01 04:13:35 · 8 answers · asked by snak3s2001 3

De tin marín de dó pingüé cuca la mácara títere fue, yo no fui, fue teté, pégale pégale que ella fue

I was to know where this came from


Thanks in advance

2007-02-01 04:01:30 · 2 answers · asked by jose g 3

The statement was "If I wasn't having a crisis, I wouldn't have been vulnerable, and he wouldn't have been able to influence me".

2007-02-01 03:45:44 · 4 answers · asked by phil5775 3

2007-02-01 03:44:00 · 3 answers · asked by birko 2

2007-02-01 03:42:38 · 3 answers · asked by Nina 2

2007-02-01 03:37:00 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous

2007-02-01 03:33:16 · 12 answers · asked by intelligent girl 2

2007-02-01 03:14:05 · 4 answers · asked by voileteiyes 1

2007-02-01 03:05:27 · 5 answers · asked by Pereth D 1

2007-02-01 02:56:30 · 6 answers · asked by ChrisB 1

it suggests that i use every time instead of everytime and Firefox for firefox (silly me, its a proper noun haha!) well. my question is, isnt everytime a word? im confused

2007-02-01 02:48:01 · 2 answers · asked by grabber 2

Shouldn't one of them mean you have a "good" or "great" chance. I would say since fat chance has more girth, than it should mean you have more of a chance.

If I have a conversation, I want to be able to say:

Askee: Hey you going to eat them delicious fries.
Me: There's a pretty fat chance that I'm going too!

And mean that, the chances that I'm going to eat them are relatively high. Sounds good doesn't it?

2007-02-01 02:44:12 · 8 answers · asked by Billy G 1

Could be it low self-esteem, past mistakes, or hurts that confuses them on what they want out of life?

2007-02-01 02:33:28 · 23 answers · asked by Sweet Pea 3

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