I'm a bit shocked that you do not use that word more often...
I'm just messin', but I can say the same thing about 95% of the ultra rare three-letter words I find.
The strange, the bizarre and the unexpected
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I always loved the cartoon of the guy lazing on the couch, looking up at his perturbed wife, and saying "I'm leader of the greatest nation on earth! Procrastination!"Leave a comment:
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Maybe this wasn't unexpected, or even strange or bizarre: I opened a box on Christmas morning and found a brass medallion on a red, white and blue ribbon. The medallion reads, "President of the More Time Than Good Sense Society." I am proudly wearing the medallion as I type this. President though? I didn't know there was an election. Don't tell Rudy Guliani or Mike Lindell or they might get Sidney Powell on my case.Leave a comment:
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Flops,
Beautiful boxes. Just love wooden boxes.
I'd get buried in a wooden box, but no one would be able to see how beautiful it was--and... creamation is soooo much cheaper.
Hope the Kardashian calender was done with the loathing disrespect appropriate for silk maggots.
"S**t Towns of Australia?" What a lovely idea.
Had not heard of lobsters referenced ever at that event, but... so much of history is distortion and lies.
Did wise individuals gather at the stable for baby cheeses?
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overheard during afternoon food coma, Christmas Day (context, my father gave his grandsons a felt inlaid, brass initialed timber "keepsake" boxes). Me, "what are you going to put in your box, Nicholas?". Mimi (my Offspring 3), "the teeth of his victims...", Nicholas, "no...you never leave evidence".
I feel justified in thinking that we have bred weirdos. (although, I am not surprised).
On the exchange of "Buddy the Elf" gifts, the winning gifts were: 1. a Kim Kardashian calendar, 2. the classic travel guide, "S**t Towns of Australia", 3rd place: a trees ornament laser cut with, "There was more than one lobster at the birth of Jesus?".
Daniel made, from toothpicks and baby boccocini, a structure which represented "the stable for baby cheeses". babycheeses.jpg xnasbox.jpg
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True, I like constructing a word (if there's no other word I can see) and then seeing if it's valid. Recently I tried POLYPLOID and it worked. Got the same board again days later and added allo-, a prefix I'd seen on other words. Presto, ALLOPOLYPLOIDS. Don't have clue what it means but it was fun getting it.
mdyak, I sent you a PM today.Leave a comment:
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SYMPATHETOBLASTS (30/16): a cell destined to become a sympathetic neuronLeave a comment:
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Sorry for the *very* late response, I don't know if the number of boards like that has decreased since that purge a while back. I never thought of this, but would that be the longest rare word ever? I like to "collect" long rare words as I have found them to be more challenging than ultra rares. (Although I will gladly take an ultra rare)Leave a comment:
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First time seeing a -nesses word get less than a -ness word.
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In botany "crena" means a tooth or notch in a crenate leaf. A crenate leaf having scalloped margins.
Were it not late fall, with trees bereft of foliage, I'd be scouting the back woods for samples.Leave a comment:
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True, I like constructing a word (if there's no other word I can see) and then seeing if it's valid. Recently I tried POLYPLOID and it worked. Got the same board again days later and added allo-, a prefix I'd seen on other words. Presto, ALLOPOLYPLOIDS. Don't have clue what it means but it was fun getting it.
mdyak, I sent you a PM today.Leave a comment:
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Don't you love it when a good word you've never seen before is a complete accident?
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Don't you love it when a good word you've never seen before is a complete accident?
Screen Shot 2021-12-17 at 3.00.45 PM.pngLeave a comment:
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