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I am under the impression that this is possible, because technically it's two different wishes, just with close to the same effect. So could someone tell their first wish (wishing star rule #1 = canceling it out) and then wish it again, only reworded (making it a different wish) on the next shooting star. Would the 2nd wish still work even if its really wishing for the the same thing?

2007-07-20 04:03:09 · 6 answers · asked by Craig Spicer II 1 in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

6 answers

You could wish the same wish a trillion times on a trillion different stars and it still may not come true - No matter who you tell or how you word it.

But, i hope yours does.

2007-07-20 04:20:22 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Actually, that wouldn't work. I would assume that it is not the actual wording of the wish, but the intention. The feeling of what you desire, rather than what you say.

Because even if you say the same wish in 5 different languages; it is still the same wish.

2007-07-20 04:16:36 · answer #2 · answered by A.R 2 · 0 0

Once your first wish is made, whoever grants wishes will get it in their inbox, if their spam filter doesn't catch it. But as they see your name again a short time later with essentially the same wish they will likely count it as one wish. Since I doubt wish granters work like American Idol where you can 'vote as many times as you like' your repeated slightly changed wish will be be spam blocked. Really though how many times can you reword the same wish?

2007-07-20 06:13:19 · answer #3 · answered by bhn1700 2 · 0 0

Shove, u they are plenty more of a Galaxies.
Proxima SynthaUrrie, Andromeda, and all others'

2007-07-20 04:08:53 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

This is astronomy not myths and folklore

2007-07-20 04:07:58 · answer #5 · answered by Gene 7 · 0 0

what difference would that make?

2007-07-24 03:37:51 · answer #6 · answered by johnandeileen2000 7 · 0 0

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