Playing Wordtwist sometimes feels like a trip down the rabbit hole.
Into madness.
Where nothing makes sense. Or very little does.
Though, it's interesting.
And entertaining.
Of the 75 words I played in this game, I didn't have definitions or ready understandings of 46. Add 6 that I've learned since starting to play Wordtwist and the total would have been 52 out of 75.
If my keyboard and fingers weren't now at war, I would have easily added another 20 words, half of which I would not have definitions attached.
I could chalk it all up to "learning new words," but even loving such words as "oont" I would never, ever, ever have an opportunity to use them in conversation.
Ever.
Unless I wanted to amuse my audience with the weird words found recently playing this game.
As the Chesire Cat pointed out, we're not crazy, our reality is different.
Or the Queen claiming to every day imagine 6 impossible things before breakfast.
Into madness.
Where nothing makes sense. Or very little does.
Though, it's interesting.
And entertaining.
Of the 75 words I played in this game, I didn't have definitions or ready understandings of 46. Add 6 that I've learned since starting to play Wordtwist and the total would have been 52 out of 75.
If my keyboard and fingers weren't now at war, I would have easily added another 20 words, half of which I would not have definitions attached.
I could chalk it all up to "learning new words," but even loving such words as "oont" I would never, ever, ever have an opportunity to use them in conversation.
Ever.
Unless I wanted to amuse my audience with the weird words found recently playing this game.
As the Chesire Cat pointed out, we're not crazy, our reality is different.
Or the Queen claiming to every day imagine 6 impossible things before breakfast.
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