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still winning |
I am winning for now! |
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I win |
I am winning for now! |
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I am winning for now! |
I win |
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1 Attachment(s) You think your picts are cute don't ya I bet mines cuter!!! Snapped it this morning!!! |
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Back and winning |
I am winning for now! :D |
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All I have ever done is to post pictures as I take them I do not make claims as to the quality of them as this would only be my opinion. |
:p well sorry!!!:rolleyes: lol! I think some of them are cute!!! By the way I am winning for now!;) |
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Winning for now!!! |
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GEEEEEEEEZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ.....does he suffer with verbal Diarrhea or what...lol |
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But I think you have to agree that it was more interesting than "I win" ;) |
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Yes you are, as usual, correct I do agree and anyone who can say as many words as he can without a stutter or falter should get in this thread it is definitely better than "I Win" or even I am winning for now" and it does show an amount of intelligence as well don't you think ? :D |
Verbose Main Entry: verbose Part of Speech: adjective Definition: wordy, long-winded Synonyms: bombastic, circumlocutory, diffuse, flowery, full of air, fustian, gabby, garrulous, grandiloquent, involved, loquacious, magniloquent, palaverous, periphrastic, pleonastic, prolix, redundant, repeating, repetitious, repetitive, rhetorical, talkative, talky, tautological, tautologous, tedious, tortuous, windy, yacking Antonyms: concise, succinct Main Entry: bombastic Part of Speech: adjective Definition: pompous, grandiloquent Synonyms: aureate, balderdash, big-talking, declamatory, euphuistic, flowery, full of hot air, fustian, grandiose, high-flown, highfalutin, histrionic, inflated, loudmouthed, magniloquent, orotund, ostentatious, overblown, ranting, rhapsodic, rhetorical, sonorous, stuffed shirt, swollen, tumid, turgid, verbose, windbag, windy, wordy Antonyms: humble, quiet, reserved, restrained . |
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Would I be correct in saying you believe I am "Antonyms" then ? :rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes: |
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Boring bor·ing (bôrng, br-) adj. Uninteresting and tiresome; dull. boring·ly adv. boring·ness n. Synonyms: boring, monotonous, tedious, irksome, tiresome, humdrum These adjectives refer to what is so uninteresting as to cause mental weariness. Boring implies feelings of listlessness and discontent: I had never read such a boring book. What is monotonous bores because of lack of variety: "There is nothing so desperately monotonous as the sea" (James Russell Lowell). Tedious suggests dull slowness or long-windedness: Traveling by plane avoids spending tedious days on the train. Irksome describes what is demanding of time and effort and yet is dull and often unrewarding: "I know and feel what an irksome task the writing of long letters is" (Edmund Burke). Something tiresome fatigues because it seems to be interminable or to be marked by unremitting sameness: "What a tiresome being is a man who is fond of talking" (Benjamin Jowett). Humdrum refers to what is commonplace, trivial, or unexcitingly routine: My quiet cousin led a humdrum existence. |
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See Also: DULLNESS, LIFE Bored as Greta Garbo —Alice McDermott Boredom enveloped her like heavy bedding —Yukio Mishima Boredom … like a cancer in the breast —Evelyn Waugh Boredom, like hookworm, is endemic —Beryl Markham Boredom wafted from her like the scent of stale sweat —Anon Boredom was increasing … like a silent animal sadly rubbing itself against the sultry grass —Yukio Mishima Bore me the same as watching an industrial training film, or hearing a lecture on the physics of the three-point stance —Richard Ford Boring as airline food —Anon Boring as going to the toilet —Sylvia Plath Boring, like reading the Life Cycle of the Hummingbird —Dan Wakefield Could feel his boredom like an actual presence, like a big German shepherd that must be fed and restrained —Marge Piercy Life’s tedious as a twice-told tale —William Shakespeare This famous simile also appeared in Homer’s Odyssey in the format of a question, “What’s so tedious as a twice-told tale?.” Yawns [caused by a dull discussion] inflated in his throat like balloons —Derek Lambert |
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I see...but do you know that silence can be a sign of guilt...lol :p:p:p |
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noun 1. the fact or state of having committed an offense, crime, violation, or wrong, especially against moral or penal law; culpability: He admitted his guilt. 2. a feeling of responsibility or remorse for some offense, crime, wrong, etc., whether real or imagined. 3. conduct involving the commission of such crimes, wrongs, etc.: to live a life of guilt. Dictionary.com Free Toolbar Define Guilt Instantly. Faster Page Loads With Fewer Ads. Dictionary.com Ad verb (used with object) Informal . 4. to cause to feel guilty (often followed by out or into ): She totally guilted me out, dude. He guilted me into picking up the tab. See also guilt-trip. |
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