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I choose: Tummeler: A Yiddish word meaning any lively prankish or mischievous man.

(Any tummelers out there that would care to have a go at this question??? *wink*)

2006-10-10 03:01:04 · 27 answers · asked by Marianne not Ginger™ 7 in Entertainment & Music Polls & Surveys

27 answers

Babblative: meaning annoyingly talkative.
As in - "The babblative bimbo bored the boys with her blithering balderdash".

2006-10-10 08:42:50 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 2

Oi Vay! Not a Tummler! Anything but a Tummler! The Catskill mountain comedy circuit is sooooo 1950s. You'd have to be crazy to want to be a Tummler nowadays. Better to be thought a Rogue.

Yeah...how about Rogue? A Rogue is usually a playfully or mischievous person...plus it's one of those fun words that sounds so cool when spoken outloud...and it's just not used enough to describe people. Usually, we by pass calling someone a Rogue and cheapen their personal Roguishness by simply calling them Bstrds instead...and where's the fun in that?

2006-10-10 03:56:46 · answer #2 · answered by gotalife 7 · 1 0

Always willing to be a Tummeler then ;o)

I think my word for day would be Trampede
It's a combination of trample and stampede, which is exactly what I had to do to get to work this morning, as apparently the entire city of London was on my train. When politeness fails, when social conscience is burned up with hatred and fury and you have no other option, stick your elbows out and trampede your way through...

2006-10-11 01:41:57 · answer #3 · answered by mdfalco71 6 · 0 0

trojan

Not the condom, even though I am like a little sperm trying to swim and swim with all my might only to get nowhere fast. Not the horse, although I feel like I am being controlled by another.... called a "gift" when, in fact, I am merely a pawn. Instead, the trojan of the day is the virus that has been laughing at me every time I attempt to anything on my computer. Darn thing is a fiesty one. :(

2006-10-10 11:50:17 · answer #4 · answered by Mr. Sky 6 · 1 0

Tumultuous:

disruptive: characterized by unrest or disorder or insubordination; "effects of the struggle will be violent and disruptive"; "riotous times"; "these troubled areas"; "the tumultuous years of his administration"; "a turbulent and unruly childhood"

____________________________________________________

I decided that i must elaborate.

My relationship is tumultuous. My husband's halfway across the world and we're just getting to know the deeper part of ourselves. It's so odd that after three years of being with him, there are still secrets and stories and scars we have not seen in each other. But i guess since we're getting closer, we are feelings things more with our heart than just our eyes or fingertips. It's a tumultuous time... getting to know someone that you love. I'm torn between wanting to kill him and wanting to hug him. But i can't do either considering he's in Egypt and i'm in Canada. My heart is going through a whirldwind of emotions that can't really be expressed in words.
My life is tumultuous. I am so torn between who i am and who i could be. And is the person i could be the person i should be? Or am i just complicating things further? It feels like i'm disrupting my somewhat orderly life with all these thoughts. And i just can't seem to let go of the ideals i hold so near to my heart. Sort of like i'm trapped in a box and i've never had air. But now there are punctures in the box and i'm learning how to breathe again...

Tumultuous.

Defenitely my word of the day, week, month, year.

2006-10-10 03:03:47 · answer #5 · answered by falzalnz 6 · 0 1

Crapulent. Now there is a word that sounds like what it describes. It means to overindulge, especially with alcohol. The noun form is crapulence and the adverb is crapulous. I felt crapulous after the party.

2006-10-10 06:13:47 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Relax

2006-10-10 03:07:04 · answer #7 · answered by Crissy 5 · 0 0

"the"

used, esp. before a noun, with a specifying or particularizing effect, as opposed to the indefinite or generalizing force of the indefinite article a or an): the book you gave me; Come into the house.

2006-10-10 16:48:09 · answer #8 · answered by banjo_mccain 4 · 0 0

A Goomba, a person who acts silly and says silly things. (my little 3 year old buddy Jacob told me this word).

2006-10-10 03:03:20 · answer #9 · answered by ☺Smiley☺ 5 · 0 0

Violation:

It is a word that means what ever you want it to mean and not necessarily anything in specific.

2006-10-10 13:40:38 · answer #10 · answered by LORD Z 7 · 0 0

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