English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

Words & Wordplay - February 2007

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

I am a translator, please give me some information about Springfield,Missouri and Broadway

2007-02-22 06:34:12 · 3 answers · asked by Anonymous

I am writing an FAQ book and I have used the same several question words to begin each new question again and again. I would like some new, more creative question words to start my questions with. Do you know of any? Example: How, What, Where, When, Why, Who, how much, how many, whom, could, may, etc. Any help is appreciated? I'm running out of ideas.

2007-02-22 06:26:05 · 4 answers · asked by ? 3

ENGLISH ?
Then try read the following.

Kukata kaka ku ku ke ki ki ki ka ga ga gi gu ka ka ki ki ka

Congratulations u have learnt the langauge of monkeys.
Now start "JUMPING".
U can star . . . . . .

2007-02-22 06:18:03 · 3 answers · asked by SE7EN 3

Mine has to be "onliest". I don't know why, but it just tickles me. (For interlopers, "only" is already a superlative, it doesn't require a superlative suffix). I imagine they're deriving it from "lonely".

What's yours?

2007-02-22 06:18:03 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous

2

find the person
lerym spreet
unscramble the word to form a lady name

2007-02-22 06:06:04 · 13 answers · asked by Lolade A 1

what does R.S.V.P stand for??????????????

2007-02-22 05:29:59 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous

Be creative, and make it as funny as possible.

2007-02-22 05:24:16 · 12 answers · asked by Anonymous

between the irish and the scots irish?
its for a report

2007-02-22 05:16:30 · 2 answers · asked by shortysherry46 3

2007-02-22 05:09:00 · 15 answers · asked by Anonymous

2007-02-22 04:54:24 · 4 answers · asked by snoopysophie 1

The context is: "Screens topsoil, landfill, builders waste and gravel". Where does the apostophe go in "builders"?

2007-02-22 04:51:17 · 21 answers · asked by Queen of the Stone Age 3

It comes after my family name and i cant find the answer anywhere else plz help

2007-02-22 04:39:00 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous

2007-02-22 04:22:20 · 9 answers · asked by corkyhart 1

2007-02-22 04:21:07 · 5 answers · asked by dsr_80 1

I am almost positive I saw a funny word one time, and its definition specifically referred to opening locked doors using a credit card (or something like a credit card). Does anybody know what word this may have been? I think I remember it being a peculiar word to me (not "jimmy" or "pick").

2007-02-22 04:16:26 · 8 answers · asked by Riven 2

2007-02-22 04:14:47 · 3 answers · asked by Anonymous

Does not a meaning of crazy?

2007-02-22 04:14:14 · 2 answers · asked by Anonymous

Normally in the English language the prefix "in" means "not" such as the following:
inability,inadequate,incapable, incomplete,incorrect, indecisive etc.

Why does inflammable mean the same as flammable instead of "not"flammable?

2007-02-22 03:43:05 · 6 answers · asked by ttpawpaw 7

as title.
many thanks for answering.

2007-02-22 03:41:07 · 2 answers · asked by jeffhcy 2

9. _____ = territory ruled by a prince, the dignity or rank or position of a prince
princess
princedom
princely
principality
principality

10. _____ = the kinship relation between an offspring and the mother, maternity
motherhood
motherland
motherboard
motherly
mother country

11. _____ = the position of professor
professorial
academy
professorship
lecturer
lecture

12. _____ = the state of being a woman; womanly qualities
womankind
womanliness
womanise
adultery
womanhood

13. _____ = skill in sailing
sailors-hip
starship
seamanship
censorship
kinship

14. _____ = the trait of condescending to those of lower social status
snobbier
snobbery
snobism
snobery
inverted snob

15. _____ = death because of the person's religious faith or political belief
calamity
asylum
martyrdom
casualties
phobia

16. _____ = fairness in following the rules of the game
fairy
fairway
aggression
phenom
sportsmanship

2007-02-22 03:38:12 · 5 answers · asked by painforevol 1

Which spelling is more commonly used and/or more acceptable in print?

I intend to use it for "uncollectible/-able payment".

I've always thought that, in terms of common usage,
collectible = noun (figurines, etc.)
collectable = adjective (can be collected, e.g. payments)

But after looking at the dictionary, both spellings are acceptable for both definitions.

2007-02-22 03:22:59 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous

i am in 9th grade
i am in the 9th grade

2007-02-22 03:12:54 · 10 answers · asked by Anonymous

2007-02-22 02:49:02 · 3 answers · asked by YGGIZ 1

if you could at least try to widen it for a thousand words, it's much better..

2007-02-22 02:35:54 · 5 answers · asked by JhEn 1

1

what is the missing letter above?

2007-02-22 02:26:13 · 1 answers · asked by endgame1915 3

"This one`s well past its sell-by. " He stepped back as Jack climbed out of the car. "Female, partly buried. Bang in the middle of the waste land."
What`s the meaning of the first sentance?
Tnx in advance.

2007-02-22 02:22:43 · 4 answers · asked by Effy 1

2007-02-22 01:56:56 · 16 answers · asked by urmi 1

i am in 9th grade
i am in d 9th grade

2007-02-22 01:51:50 · 19 answers · asked by Anonymous

fedest.com, questions and answers