kalayzich has adopted no words, looked up 0 words, created 611 lists, listed 95254 words, written 621 comments, added 0 tags, and loved 8 words.

Comments by kalayzich

  • In old Russian cookbooks it was called simply green soup.23

    May 19, 2017

  • Stats

    ‘Donald Trump’ has been looked up 322 times, is no one's favorite word yet, has been added to 1 list, has no comments yet, and is not a valid Scrabble word.

    May 19, 2017

  • This could be interesting....

    keep it succinct

    May 19, 2017

  • Another of my favourite Hopkins poems, which considering the date of its composition (1881) seems remarkably prophetic of our current concern for habitat loss and the ever-diminishing role of wild nature in our lives. David Sutton

    May 7, 2017

  • I want to chat with ruzuzu on Pinterest How do I do that?

    May 4, 2017

  • https://au.pinterest.com/search/pins/?q=hybrid%20cats&rs=typed&term_meta=hybrid%7Ctyped&term_meta=cats%7Ctyped

    May 2, 2017

  • https://au.pinterest.com/search/pins/?rs=ac&len=2&q=spiral%20patterns&eq=spiral%20patterns&etslf=17098&term_meta=spiral%7Cautocomplete%7Cundefined&term_meta=patterns%7Cautocomplete%7Cundefined

    May 2, 2017

  • Australasian robin(s) The bird family Petroicidae includes roughly 45 species in about 15 genera. All are endemic to Australasia: New Guinea, Australia, New Zealand and numerous Pacific Islands as far east as Samoa

    April 28, 2017

  • more lookups for penis than happiness 13,277 to 10,609 sex gets 23,683 moist gets 12,998 fuck gets 23,519 is gets 22,837 good gets 17,898 antidisestablishmentarianism gets 13,538 the gets 28,261 bilby gets 13,531 hack gets 10,531 gullible gets 7,162 evil gets 9,443 be gets 22,058  looks like love wins hands down ,LOL gets 3,044  lol gets 15,204 wordnik gets 15,131 test gets 47,787

    April 24, 2017

  • Love has been looked up 3,947 times, favorited 16 times, listed 253 times, commented on 21 times, and has a Scrabble score of 7.

    July 24, 2010 yes but now 2017 it is over 69,000 thanks ALEXZ ‘hate’ has been looked up 11890 times

    April 24, 2017

  • okay wordniks what are the most looked up words eg and ie fleek has been looked up

    39,300 times

    April 24, 2017

  • crop dusting

    2. Colloquial the practice of releasing a silent fart while walking close to another person or group of people.

    April 24, 2017

  • a shitstorm of fucktardation

    April 23, 2017

  • Democrat2/ˈdɛməkræt/ (say 'demuhkrat)

    noun a large, crisp, deep red apple, sweet with acidic overtones, originating near Glenorchy, Tasmania, in about 1900.

    Also, (formerly), Tasma.

    April 21, 2017

  • noctivagator ,A person who wanders or roams about at night.

    April 14, 2017

  • Some may call me anal retentive but what about

    DIVULGATOR

    FUSTIGATOR

    LEVIGATOR

    These species are worth listing

    April 14, 2017

  • no-ie

    noun Cricket Colloquial a no-ball.

    April 14, 2017

  • now fixed thanks alexz

    April 13, 2017

  • wouldn't shout if a shark bit him

    April 11, 2017

  • The exaltation of the larks

    were heard in high-exalting

    by the mallards who were rather flushed

    from playing in the puddling

    April 10, 2017

  • tombstoning noun Insurance the illegal practice of writing insurance policies for dead or fictitious people, in order to boost one's sales commission.

    from the tombstone1 marking the burial place of someone who has died

    April 8, 2017

  • Fine words butter no parsnips

    April 5, 2017

  • related to journal

    April 5, 2017

  • The cheese slid off my cracker,wtf is this list ? please explain

    April 5, 2017

  • Beckham really pissed on his chips when he kicked that Argie.

    April 5, 2017


  • People who wouldn't piss on you if you were on fire when you're a failure are suddenly all over you when you're successful.


    April 5, 2017

  • I wouldn't piss in your mouth if your teeth were on fire

    April 5, 2017

  • I had a moment ......

    April 4, 2017

  • don't be intimi(dated) by the word date

    April 3, 2017

  • dafuq

    interjection Colloquial (taboo) (an exclamation indicating surprise, indignation, anger, etc.)

    a respelt shortening of what the fuck?

    March 28, 2017

  • occulingus

    noun the practice of licking the eyeballs of one's sexual partner as a form of amorous activity.

    Latin occu(lus) eye + ling(ua) tongue + -us

    March 17, 2017

  • floral foam dropped from the entry oasis

    March 17, 2017

  • pawn-and-prawn instead of porn-and-prawn,even lexicographers make mistakes in the 6th edition

    March 15, 2017

  • buttered toast yum

    March 14, 2017

  • butter icing

    March 14, 2017

  • butterfat

    March 14, 2017

  • Butter is a 2011 comedy film directed by Jim Field Smith

    March 14, 2017

  • butter chicken, unsalted butter

    March 14, 2017

  • butter-and-egg man U.S. slang a wealthy, unsophisticated man who spends money freely.

    March 14, 2017

  • butter tart, butter up, melted butter

    March 14, 2017

  • butter-knife ,butter-and-eggs

    March 14, 2017

  • hackbutter hagbutter ,I can do this all night

    March 14, 2017

  • butter of zinc, nutbutter,rebutter,buttercup,unbuttered,butterscotch,butterweed

    March 14, 2017

  • butter believe it ,abutter , is good too

    March 14, 2017

  • wwilf what was I looking for

    March 6, 2017

  • note yummy is a noun watermelon has a new meaning and shipping .... speaker (ecstacy tablet), stunt is a battle, spridg is now  spridge and looks like a correction redux is a noun   range is grazing ground for stock in US,rip ripper -surfing,rinse,package=genitalia ,pad has been reworked,new sense for parachute to do with politics, pegged (computers), pop (colour) ,power(saw,tool),pull (corn),obsessive is a noun ,olive branch (ww1) ,open(completion) overrun (bushfire),native ((of an application) designed specifically for the operating system of a particular digital device), master (free settler), meat (totem) mess (convicts),mock (loser) leg (Australian Rules) like (social media) lit (as in English lit) hendra virus corrected to Hendra virus.GIFT expanded definition.fall ,autumn ,fat (bass) fizzer very good.friend (social network verb) date (utero) deal (drugs) dog(affectionate term dog (informer)duff (ugly woman) dummy (mannequin) cagey (marble)carry (weight) catfish (internet) casino (dance music) clean (not polluting the environment) closeted (undisclosed) commit (relationship) con (convention)contained (bushfire) conversion (linguistic) cook (drugs)corners (game) cray adj meaning crazy croppy (crop circle person) babe (woman with style) band (a cluster of locusts) band (ring)bardi ( as fish bait) bavette (steak) bingo (scrabble) blow (cocaine) board (kiteboard paddleboard) bone (intercourse) boom (projecting arm) brush(dress the hair) buffed (computer games) bumper (pinball) activated (of nuts) work (shape stone or metal) toss (completion eg tuna toss) S (in clothing size small) sabayon (sauce for fish)section (mental health)scutch (bricks)shake (elude)soil(cooking) stinger(spike strip) stunt (battle,trick) sucky (wave with strong backwash) yak(kayak) quaff(clever ploy) palm (transfer secretly) stop word (panic word)ombre (adj) lend(convict) legend (false life history) lodge (income tax) play the short game (whist) jackknife(jackleg knife) hokey-pokey (ice cream) growl (vagina) froth(horse foam)chinstrap(beard) cupping(coffee cupping)

    March 6, 2017

  • kangarooing kangarooed

    5. to squat over a toilet seat, while avoiding contact with it.

    December 10, 2016

  • Adam Kretschmer played inquests for 203

    November 4, 2016

  • transliteration played by Garth Van Vliet

    October 31, 2016

  • pornaoke

    an entertainment in which members of an audience emit lustful utterances in synchronization with those seen on a pornographic film played silently on a large screen

    October 13, 2016

  • great word, parvanimous

    1819 Examiner 14 Nov. 731/2 We mean..any parvanimous great man, who would fain revenge his slavery at home by lording it out of doors.

    1855 L. Hunt Let. 26 July (1862) II. 204 What I partly did myself, half for the reasons above mentioned, and half perhaps out of a sort of parvanimous wish not to assist the critics.

    1945 Amer. Hist. Rev. 50 286 The conduct of most of the Republicans respecting the Treaty been discouragingly parvanimous.

    October 5, 2016

  • 2.4 Shuffling Tiles

    Each player has the right to shuffle the tiles within the tile bag before the game starts

    September 20, 2016

  • To realise that some frustrations are species of joy is to become open to kinds of value other than the straightforwardly utilitarian.Jeremy Khoo

    September 19, 2016

  • I'm frustrated because I'm looking at the board and I can't seem to see anything good. I'm frustrated because I'm getting lucksacked. I'm frustrated because I'm not lucksacking. I'm frustrated because I'm not good enough and I need to get better.Jeremy Khoo

    September 19, 2016

  • I'm frustrated because I'm looking at the board and I can't seem to see anything good. I'm frustrated because I'm getting lucksacked. I'm frustrated because I'm not lucksacking. I'm frustrated because I'm not good enough and I need to get better.Jeremy Khoo

    September 19, 2016

  • in the trade business what is the different between makeables and technicals?

    September 19, 2016

  • well you don't have ratbite

    September 16, 2016

  • idiot strings strings attached to children's mittens to prevent the wearer from loosing them

    September 12, 2016

  • Maybe she needed an epipen but couldn't find one in her basket of deplorables.

    September 11, 2016

  • The best you can say about the true "deplorables" is that they can't spell.

    September 11, 2016

  • Clinton’s ‘deplorables’ remark: Trump has denigrated one group after another; Clinton goes after his constituency.

    September 11, 2016

  • Is Trump jealous he Didn’t come up with baskets Of deplorables?

    September 11, 2016

  • Killery you are now toast!! Super predators , basket of deplorables?? Trump pence!

    September 11, 2016

  • volitoll is how she says it I say volatile

    September 11, 2016

  • Braconid: earned Brett Smitheram, from London, 176 points & World Scrabble Champion this week. A braconid is a parasitic wasp.

    September 11, 2016

  • since the 3rd of September zyzzyvaed has been looked up 45 times

    wonder if it will make 100?

    They say 50,000 people visit this site

    September 11, 2016

  • great word for misanthrope sounds like mentionfind

    menschenfiend

    September 9, 2016

  • Adult braconids are really cute! They're smallish and dainty-looking. I used to sequence their DNA for a living (I think I even had one in the Cotesia genus).

    September 9, 2016

  • 1957 E. B. Ford Butterflies (ed. 3) vi. 109 The Ichneumons are again divided between the true Ichneumons (family Ichneumonidae) and the closely related Braconids (family Braconidae).

    September 9, 2016

  • 1916 Canadian Entomologist XLVIII. 89 Dinocampus americanus..a common Braconid parasite of many of the larger species of Coccinellids.

    September 9, 2016

  • Of or belonging to the Braconidæ, a family of small ichneumon flies.

    September 9, 2016

  • But let's get back to the wasp-cocoon infestation I mentioned. Those little white rice-looking protuberances on the caterpillar are the cocoons of small braconid wasps (Cotesia congregatus). Earlier, the wasplings had been dining on the innards of the caterpillar, and the caterpillar could do nothing about it. But now that they're pupating, the caterpillar's life is almost over. It will die when the parasitoid wasps emerge. If you see a tomato hornworm so infested, and you hate them, as I do, leave it be. The wasps once hatched will seek out other hornworms. This is nature's way of protecting her tomatoes, eggplants, and potatoes

    September 9, 2016

  • So when played in Scrabble did the other guy go "oh frass"

    Did anyone laugh?

    stir this is the shortest cryptic

    what do you call a stiff examination ? autopsy

    September 9, 2016

  • Caterpillars are attacked by a braconid wasp Cotesia congregata that lays dozens of eggs within each larva =caterpillar...

    September 9, 2016

  • 1913 Oxf. Univ. Gaz. 4 June 961/1 The Braconids Caelinus niger and Pezomachus fasciatus.

    September 9, 2016

  • Word ‘braconid’ – wasps that are parasitic on moths and butterflies -- wins Scrabble championship. Also should define tech lottery winners.

    September 9, 2016

  • scoring 176 points you could say it was a stinging play plus 5 points because it was challenged making it 181 points

    September 9, 2016

  • come on 50,000 people visit wordnik a day

    ‘braconid’ has been looked up 819 times, has been favorited 1 time, has been added to 5 lists, has 1 comment, and has a Scrabble score of 13.

    September 9, 2016

  • looked up 29 times and im told 50,000 visit this site everyday?

    I know ive zyzzyvaed over a million times.

    September 8, 2016

  • A British man won the Scrabble world title with the eight-letter, 176-point word "braconid," a type parasitoid wasp.

    September 8, 2016

  • ‘braconid’ has been looked up 811 times, has been favorited 1 time, has been added to 4 lists, has 1 comment, and has a Scrabble score of 13.

    September 8, 2016

  • The 176 play by Brett Smitheram making him the scrabble champion of 2016

    September 8, 2016

  • most scrabblers do zyzzyvaing on a program called zyzzyva

    , Windows (Zyzzyva 5.0.3),

    September 8, 2016

  • ‘zyzzyvaed’ has been looked up 22 times, has been favorited 1 time, is on no lists yet, has 2 comments, and is not a valid Scrabble word

    September 8, 2016


  • September 8, 2016

  • you still haven't added twonie

    September 8, 2016

  • well not quite,if enough people use it it may become a word.recently bonused and bingoed became words that can be used ,zyzzyvaed means he used the program called zyzzyva which scrabblers use so he zyzzyvaed a word does this make sense? Thanks for your interest alexz

    September 8, 2016

  • Steven Alexander Not sure why there's a need for a cobbled-together list at wordnik when there's a promise (by Elie) of a (sure to be well-done) page by WESPA.

    September 8, 2016

  • Ganesh Asirvatham Potentially any inspired 9 letter or more play would make the cut. As most of us are aware, knowing the word and spotting the word in open play are two very different concepts. Lewis Mackay played YPSILOID which is relatively easy to find when cardboxing on ZYZZYVA but holding DIIPLOS and looking for a Y to make a bonus is inspired indeed.

    September 7, 2016

  • David Sutton Eating WATERZOOI is one thing; spotting it as a nine-letter word through two separated floaters is another! But yes, the matter is subjective; doesn't stop it being a potentially entertaining and instructive addition to the WESPA website.

    September 7, 2016

  • Karen Richards Years ago, I gave out an award for an interesting play at WYSC - this was heavily criticised, to the point where I ceased doing it.. The argument was that it was subjective. I awarded the prize to the player of AUBERGINE, being a 9-letter play, with a strange combination of letters, and nor even a word used in most countries. However, I was told this was nothing special. Just saying, you are getting into an area where people will say .. "but that isn't anything special." We have been eating WATERZOOI all week, incidentally, so I don't see that as particularly interesting

    September 7, 2016

  • Mohan Chunkath Jim Geary played WATERZOOI

    September 7, 2016

  • Liz Fagerlund re Nigel's CHLORODYNE, for anyone who doesn't know how this spectacular play was formed, this was played in a club game in 1998 (he only started playing in 1996) with a rack of CDHLNR? - an E at the bottom of the board would have given CHiLDREN or CHaNDLER for 63 points. He played through O_O___E for his amazing 10 letter word; also making ID FY and EN (from the letters of WIFELY above it) for a score of 99 points. I notice looking at a picture of the board in NZ Forwords mag Dec 1998 that if QIN had been a word back then, CHLoRDAN would have played through an A with the N on QI for 76 points.

    September 6, 2016

  • Allan Simmons A question is whether BRACONID is really a fantastic word to spot or is it more of a bread-and-butter eight at this level. I imagine it's quite a useful eight with no duplicates and no E or S, and to the Scrabbler is no different from the likes of CARBINOL , COLUBRID or the more common CUPBOARD. Of course any 9x played at a critical WSC final quite rightly immediately inherits a lot of kudos and the news reports would be rather drab if the winning word was CUPBOARD

    September 6, 2016

  • John Hamilton The one that sticks out for me was David Eldar playing SUBCOSTA to secure the win in the first WYSC

    September 6, 2016

  • Ganesh Asirvatham TA(OISEACH) is sadly obsolete now

    September 6, 2016

  • Chris Hawkins GOLDFISH for 185 was played in the 1991semi- final

    September 6, 2016

  • Somehow DOUZEPER and JELUTONG have not got a mention yet...?

    Nick Ivanovski

    September 6, 2016

  • Steven Alexander Dan Pratt's play of KNOT one short of the top right triple (all S's gone, I believe) to set up his subsequent BAN(KNOT)E, in the 1988 North American championship.

    September 6, 2016

  • Geoff Cooper BRACONID does not have a scrabble score of 13. There is nowhere on the board where you can play it for that score. The sum of the number of points on the tiles which spell BRACONID is 13

    September 6, 2016

  • I'm bored with BRACONID now

    who said that?

    September 6, 2016

  • Rik Kennedy As a more humble offering, I extended OVERLEAF to CLOVERLEAF at the 4 nations tourney. It was the only way to escape a blocked board and made room for a win from a dead position

    September 6, 2016

  • I played mindfuck against Helen Hynes

    Tony K

    September 6, 2016

  • Jay Jay Jegatheva Jegathesan well REDUVIID needs to be there... especially as it basically did to Pakorn the word he initially played leaving the U on the board (edit: to go with what Elie Dangoor said...this was from one of their world championship final clashes).. i dont think i need to spell out who played it smile emoticon

    September 6, 2016

  • Naween Fernando I used a blank once for 1 point to try and win an endgame but I didn't win.

    September 6, 2016

  • Nicky Deco Excellent idea!

    September 6, 2016

  • David Sutton

    September 5 at 7:30pm

    ..

    It has been suggested to me, in my role as current keeper of the zyzzyva definitions, that BRACONID should now be tagged with ‘as played by Brett Smitheram as a nine-timer in the 2016 WSC’. I don’t myself think that zyzzyva is the place for such commemoration, but it did lead me on to the idea that the WESPA website might have some sort of ‘WESPA Word Hall of Fame’, preserving particularly notable plays for the admiration and edification of us all.

    Of course, there are problems. I think that to guarantee integrity and provide context the plays would have to be from recorded games made in a public tournament, and inevitably there is an element of subjectivity: one man’s ‘Wow, BRACONID!’ may be another man’s ‘Well, of course Brett is never going to miss your basic common-or-garden parasitoid wasp’. But I’m sure there have been plays that everyone would agree are spectacular: examples might be WATERZOOI (sorry, I forget who played this) through two floaters, and Nigel Richards playing CHLORODYNE and WORLDSCALE.

    Anyway, for what it’s worth I donate the idea if anyone wants to run with it.

    September 6, 2016

  • David Sutton Yes, what I had in mind were more the beautiful or 'wow!' plays. Beautiful plays are likely to be also significant, but significant plays will not necessarily be beautiful. But, as I say, you can't escape an element of subjectivity: clearly from reactions BRACONID did have quite a wow factor for many people

    September 6, 2016

  • Zev Kaufman I think you are mixing up two categories of bingos . One is significant plays like BRACONID which secure the world championship but are not difficult finds for experts The other category are beautiful ( and therefore inherently difficult ) finds - especially if you don't know that the opportunity exists.These would include WATERZOOI and CHLORODYNE and the like . If you want to set up a site to record these type of plays, I would suggest you set it up as a puzzle page where you show the board and rack and let the viewer try to find the best play

    September 6, 2016

  • braconid scores 176 at lille France by Brett Smitheram World scrabble champion 2016

    September 6, 2016

  • vespology does that make a million words now Erin

    braconid makes 176 at lille by Brett Smitheram 2016

    September 6, 2016

  • you seem to have gone to town here but you don't have gitch

    or townie

    September 5, 2016

  • Everything in the lexicographical constellation

    of hedgehog- hedgehogology-the last frontier

    September 5, 2016

  • kleptolography is my word,english is the biggest stealer of languages

    September 5, 2016

  • Lololol. I just zyzzyvaed it. Is shitcan new?

    by Tony Hunt

    September 3, 2016

  • a dragoon is also a breed of pigeon

    August 30, 2016

  • guitarwise is a word

    Antony Thexton Not really my area. Could win the guitar olympics; needs a notes for second dial a la Spinal Tap, Great skill; seen him live, gives good show. However YES live TOOK me somewhere. With Steve, I'm still in the room with someone clever. Satriani has a better tone (for me), and Gilmour has the feel and restraint. SRV floats my boat if I have need for flash and speed (and groove). Our Tommy still tops my list, guitarwise.

    August 28, 2016

  • cucamelon My first little cucamelon! About the size of my pinkie. And more little ones on the way

    August 28, 2016

  • not worth a crumpet

    August 23, 2016

  • doing a bradbury

    Define

    Relate

    List

    Discuss

    See

    Hear

    doing a bradbury

    August 23, 2016

  • what no humdinger? doozy ? dench pucker bonza ..well that's just dandy.

    July 25, 2016

  • the tongue consists of eight muscles, not one.

    May 10, 2016

  • There are approximately 650 skeletal muscles in the human body,[1

    May 10, 2016

  • There are three types of muscle, skeletal or striated, cardiac, and smooth

    May 10, 2016

  • CHE(MOTHER)APY

    May 6, 2016

  • fooliaminy fools collectively

    April 1, 2016

  • http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-02-12/blair-it's-time-to-get-excited-about-gravitational-waves/7162872

    February 12, 2016

  • went all occurs 51 times in the oed and 18 quotes from david bowie

    January 20, 2016

  • ecocriticism/ikoʊˈkrɪtəsɪzəm/ (say eekoh'krituhsizuhm)

    noun a branch of literary criticism that looks at the ways in which aspects of the environment are treated in literature.

    January 20, 2016

  • vage  it means Fine, handsome

    September 21, 2015

  • cacafuego literally person who shits fire from cagar to defecate and fuego

    fire

    September 20, 2015

  • were going to need t a bigger boat

    September 19, 2015

  • fucknik finally ultimately certainly knowable (the millionth new word)

    Then we launch fucknik II

    September 17, 2015

  • Right.

    Name as many mammals

    as you can in sixty seconds.

    Ready. Go.

    Hmm. Sixty seconds. Well, how would

    you like that? How about alphabetical?

    Aardvark, baboon, caribou,

    dolphin, eohippus, fox,

    gorilla, hyena, ibex, jackal,

    kangaroo, lion, marmoset,

    Newfoundland, ocelot, panda,

    rat, sloth, tiger, unicorn,

    varmint, whale, yak, zebra.

    Now, varmint is a stretch.

    So is Newfoundland. That's a dog breed.

    Unicorn is mythical.

    Eohippus is prehistoric.

    But you weren't being

    very specific now, were you, Bob?

    September 16, 2015

  • George! Oh, George, you didn't jump in the river. How sensible of you.

    September 15, 2015

  • Oh, yeah. Uh, speaking of weather, the other day when it was so cold, a friend of mine went to

    buy some long underwear, you know. The shopkeeper said to him, "How long do you want it?"

    and my friend said, "Well, from about September to March."

    September 15, 2015

  • galah

    The word galah is a borrowing into Australian English from the Aboriginal

    Yuwaalaraay language of northern New South Wales. In early records it is

    variously spelt as galar, gillar, gulah, etc. It is first recorded in 1862

    in J. McKinlay's Journal of Exploration in the Interior of Australia: `A

    vast number of gulahs, curellas, macaws... here'. The bird referred to is

    the grey-backed, pink-breasted cockatoo Eolophus roseicapillus, occurring in

    all parts of Australia except the extreme north-east and south-west. It is

    also known as the red-breasted cockatoo and rose-breasted cockatoo.

    Some early settlers use the galah as food. In 1902 the Truth newspaper

    reports: 'The sunburnt residents of at that God-forsaken outpost of

    civilisation were subsisting on stewed galah and curried crow'. Some writers

    report that galah pie was a popular outback dish.

    The galah, which usually appears in a large flock, has a raucous call, and

    it was perhaps this trait which produced the term galah session for a period

    allocated for private conversation, especially between women on isolated

    stations, over an outback radio network. F. Flynn in Northern Gateway (1963)

    writes: 'The women's radio hour, held regularly night and morning and

    referred to everywhere as the 'Galah Session'. It is a special time set

    aside for lonely station women to chat on whatever subject they like'. More

    generally, a galah session is 'a long chat' - A. Garve, Boomerang (1969):

    'For hours the three men chatted... It was Dawes who said at last, "I reckon

    this galah session's gone on long enough".'

    Very commonly in Australian English galah is used to refer to a fool or

    idiot. A.R. Marshall and R. Drysdale in Journey among Men (1962), suggest

    that this sense of galah may have a non-Australian origin: 'A clue to the

    possible origin of the slang usage of 'galah'. In Malaya gila (pronounced

    gee-lah) means mad; hence orang gila, a madman'. But this explanation has

    not been accepted, and the Australian meaning must be a transfer from the

    bird, no doubt incorporating a judgment about the relative intelligence of

    the bird. The following citations give an indication of how the term is

    used:

    1951 E. Lambert, Twenty Thousand Thieves: 'Yair, and I got better ideas than

    some of the galahs that give us our orders'.

    1960 R.S. Porteous, Cattleman: 'The bloke on the other end of the line is

    only some useless galah tryin' to sell a new brand of dip'.

    1971 J. O'Grady, Aussie Etiket: 'You would be the greatest bloody galah this

    side of the rabbit-proof fence'.

    >From this sense arise a number of colloquial idioms. To be mad as a gum-tree

    full of galahs is to be completely crazy. To make a proper galah of oneself

    is to make a complete fool of oneself. A pack of galahs is a group of

    contemptibly idiotic people.

    September 9, 2015

  • PRIVATE you have left your safety catch of AGAIN...YOU ARE A SLOB, you are about as much use as a fekin' CHOCOLATE TEAPOT!, etc, etc....

    September 7, 2015

  • Chocolatiers produce a useful chocolate teapot that holds boiling water for two minutes to make a drinkable brew.

    September 7, 2015

  • what brewski do you drink?

    September 6, 2015

  • Worldwide, 40 million to 50 million people depend upon cocoa for their livelihood

    September 5, 2015

  • Well, folks, it looks like we're up chocolate creek without a popsicle stick

    September 5, 2015

  • chocolaˈtesque adj. nonce-wd. pertaining to chocolate

    September 5, 2015

  • up your nose with a rubber hose!,

    September 5, 2015

  • logotherapy

    September 5, 2015

  • like a chook with its head cut off

    September 3, 2015

  • air biscuit (fart)

    September 3, 2015

  • springfield/ˈsprɪŋfild/ (say 'springfeeld)

    noun (also upper case) a long, high-velocity, muzzle-loading, cap-and-ball rifle used by both sides in the American Civil War and by US forces in World War I and early World War II.

    produced by an armoury in Springfield, Massachusetts, US

    September 2, 2015

  • would you go a pie?

    September 2, 2015

  • have a face as long as a fiddle

    September 1, 2015

  • Podunk

    September 1, 2015

  • dullsville

    September 1, 2015

  • chivalresque

    "You make me feel like one of those old knights," he said, "who rode about the country looking for dragons and beautiful maidens and chivalresque adventures."

    August 31, 2015

  • reached 1100 go full bore go down the rabbit hole

    August 30, 2015

  • Don't want to live as an untold story. I'd rather go out in a blaze of glory

    go to see a star about a twinkle

    August 29, 2015

  • go walkies my 800th entry

    August 29, 2015

  • thunderbirds are go

    August 28, 2015

  • pearl faker pen friend pan fry paddy field petit four pick fruit

    pilot fish plain fact plain food pour forth play false pull faces

    page five page four peak form peat fire play fair poor folk pro forma

    puppy fat put forth parking fee party frock party funds passing fad

    perfect fit pirate flag plain facts plain folly poor fellow pretty fair

    prima facie prize fight proud flesh proven fact part friends pension fund

    petrol fumes pick flowers pillow fight plain figure postage free poultry farm

    prairie fire proud father pudding face parquet floor passing fancy perfect fifth picture frame play football poetic frenzy poor features popular fancy

    popular front portly figure potato famine pound foolish press forward private fight psychic force pagan festival Pamela Frankau Paris fashion passion flower penny farthing perfect fourth perfect fright physical force pigeon fancier plentiful fare ploughed field polite fiction polite formula popular figure poultry farmer press fastener pressed flower primitive form principal food processed food performing flea personal factor personal favour pilgrim fathers primeval forest proper fraction public footpath peculiar flavor peregrine falcon period furniture physical fatigue pleasant flavor professional fee

    August 27, 2015

  • go to the mattresses

    To go to war; to use ruthless tactics; to act without restraint.

    Etymologies

    Reportedly from Mario Puzo's gangster novel The Godfather (1969). (Wiktionary)

    August 27, 2015

  • variant pushing daisies chuck a seven  flatline  go west  kiss the dust  pass in one's marble  toss in the alley   cash in one's chips  farting dust


    August 26, 2015

  • etymology to kill ,strangle

    August 25, 2015

  • Patrick the Wombat: Largest and Oldest Wombat in Captivity Turns 30 and Weighs 79 Pounds

    The marsupial is in captivity at Ballarat Wildlife Park in Sydney. The average lifespan for wild wombats is between 15 and 20 years, while the average weight is 32 pounds, a park official said.

    August 25, 2015

  • great Caesar's ghost and don't call me chief

    August 24, 2015

  • producing and utilizing fermentation also ZYMOTECHNIC adj zymotechnical too

    also zymotechnics

    August 22, 2015

  • academe would be first off the rank alphabetically.Including plurals and up to 15 letters long 12,723 words.

    August 22, 2015

  • Tom Thumb1/tɒm ˈθʌm/ (say tom 'thum)

    noun 1. a diminutive hero of folk tales.

    2. a diminutive man; a dwarf.

    3. (lower case) a very small cracker (cracker1 def. 2).

    4. a small greyish cicada.

    August 21, 2015

  • a device that allegedly translates a dog's bark and grunts into a human language
    n -S

    August 21, 2015

  • QAMUTIK

    When families go out to camps at lakes for ice fishing and goose hunting in May, they travel by snowmobile, pulling a qamutik (sled), staying on snow-covered areas or using coastal sea ice and frozen rivers.

    August 20, 2015

  • unmentionables underpants; underwear, especially women's.

    August 20, 2015

  • tetrabrachius n. /-ˈbrækɪəs/ (pl. tetrabrachii) Greek βραχίων arm a person born with a severe malformation, having four arms.

    August 20, 2015

  • In this case, you give a welfarite an $82,000 house built behind their trailer. They burn it 6 months later and collect the $82,000. That'd be a nice ...

    August 19, 2015

  • bilbyware

    August 19, 2015

  • wtf 354 lists contain ersatz

    August 18, 2015

  • krokodeilos = greek

    August 17, 2015

  • yl ending words

    August 17, 2015

  • there are 128 words that you can get "bilby" out of eg babylike lobbying nibbly

    August 16, 2015

  • special snowflake

    A problem person. A person who thinks they are unique, different and therefor more special that everyone else. Derived from too many parents telling their kids they are "special," like a "snowflake." Typically used by used by those in the customer service or retail industry to refer to bad customers.

    That lady was a special snowflake, in a blizzard of other special snowflakes; shes unique, just like everyone else.

    August 16, 2015

  • words with tony in them

    August 16, 2015

  • shiv is the most listed v ending word

    August 15, 2015

  • oed definition

    a. An aerated drink made of cream of tartar, lemon juice, sugar, yeast, and water, and flavoured with ginger.

    Macquarie dictionary definition

    noun a non-alcoholic carbonated drink of water, sugar, yeast, etc., flavoured with ginger.

    August 14, 2015

  • hooroo

    August 13, 2015

  • ahungry

    August 10, 2015

  • the shit continually comes out of the idiot box

    July 29, 2015

  • shit on tv

    July 29, 2015

  • 'Books I Love Best Yearly'.1 =BILBY award

    July 26, 2015

  • save the last dance for me

    July 15, 2015

  • The word armadillo means "little armoured one" in Spanish

    July 8, 2015

  • mollyhawk mollymawk mollification

    July 6, 2015

  • sausage fest/ˈsɒsɪdʒ fɛst/ (say 'sosij fest)

    noun 1. a fundraiser, festival, etc., which takes the form of a meal at which sausages are featured.

    2. Colloquial a place or event at which there are many sexually attractive males.

    Also, sausage party. def. 2 sausage (def. 3) + -fest

    July 1, 2015

  • omnivore

    From Latin omne "all, everything" + vorare "to devour".

    June 30, 2015

  • A microwave is a clock that occasionally cooks shit.

    (n) A hand gesture used by a midget to say hello

    Gods gift to single men.

    a device that uses magic power to heat food up. they often make a beeping noise when they are finished working their magic

    A girl who will get you warmed up but never cooks you well. A tease.

    June 3, 2015

  • the hedgehog and erinaceous are ontologically one in being sharing a hypostatic union from which the echidna

    proceeds .

    May 27, 2015

  • AJI a type of chili pepper

    CAF a cafeteria or cafe

    CAL small calorie

    CUZ a cousin

    DAS plural of da

    DEP a convenience store

    DOH do

    DUM cooked with steam

    ECO ecology

    EEW eeew, used to express disgust

    EMO emo rock

    EST a group technique for raising self awareness

    FAH fa

    FOO a name for temporary computer files

    GIF a computer file

    GIS plural of gi

    GRR interj used to express annoyance

    HOM a sacred plant of the ancient Persians

    HOO expresses suprise (interj)

    LAH la

    LOR variant of lord

    LUD a form of address to a judge in a court

    LUN a lee

    MAM a mother

    MEH interj boring

    MES ???

    MMM mm

    MOI me- interj

    MUX to transmit several messages simultaneously along a single channel

    NAV navigation

    NUG a chunk of wood sawn from a log

    OCH used to express surprise or regret

    OIK a very rude or stupid person

    OMA grandmother

    OOF interj used to express discomfort

    OPA grandfather

    ORG organization

    OWT anything

    PAK pack

    PHO Vietnamese soup

    POS plural of po

    REZ reservation (area of land)

    ROO kangaroo

    RYU school of japanese martial arts

    SAN a sanatorium

    SEV an Indian food of deep fried strands of flour

    SEZ ???

    SHO former monetary unit of Tibet

    SIG an email signature

    SOC a sociology course

    SOH sol

    SUS to suss (figure out)

    TEC tech

    TES plural of te

    TIX tickets

    TIZ tizzy

    TUM stomach

    UMS to pause in speaking

    UNI uniform/ university

    VIN French wine

    VOG air pollution caused by volcano

    XED to mark with an X

    YAS an Asian pear

    YER ??? (found on naspa website)

    YEZ you

    WUZ ???

    April 19, 2015

  • Sc.

    Categories »

    intr. Of a (small) dog: to yelp, bark. Hence, of a child or small or insignificant person: to speak in a cheeky or peevish manner; to whinge.

    1808 J. Jamieson Etymol. Dict. Sc. Lang. (at cited word), Nyaff, to yelp, to bark. It properly denotes the noise made by a small dog; although sometimes applied to a the pert chat of a saucy child, or of any person of a diminutive appearance.

    1907 D. B. Nicolson in J. Horne County Caithness i. iv. 80 Niaff, to yelp, to bark.

    1985 M. Munro Patter 50 Nyaff, to yelp; to bark. Applied to the pert chat of a saucy child, or of any diminutive person

    April 19, 2015

  • 1830 M. R. Mitford Our Village (1863) IV. 182 Flumping himself down in the midst of a tuft of cowslips.

    April 19, 2015

  • mardy-arse n. derogatory a spoilt, pampered, or cowardly person.

    1977 Jrnl. Lancs. Dial. Soc. Dec. 16/1 Mardy-arse, spoilt child.

    1990 Sunday Correspondent 8 Apr. 18/4 Some probably feared being labelled ‘mardy arses’—Mancunian for softies.

    April 19, 2015

  • flisky

    1. Sc. Flighty, frolicsome; of a horse: Skittish.

    1807 J. Hogg Auld Ettrick John 8 Mount. Bard 195 Auld Johnie's flisky dame.

    1856 G. Henderson Pop. Rhymes Berwick 48 You're like Adam Black's pony, Flisky, pranky—and no very canny.

    1880 W. H. Patterson Gloss. Words Antrim & Down Flisky, skittish, specially applied to a mare which kicks when touched on the flank

    April 19, 2015

  • 2. Colloquial a person who socially paves the way, assisting another in the making of friends or attracting sexual partners.

    March 12, 2014

  • I love your dervish dancing in the left hand corner

    March 3, 2014

  • so wordnik is digital cyber potential palimpsest

    not to mention our dna that has a history of our

    comings and shortcomings

    February 28, 2014

  • Skeleton is one of the Olympic sport disciplines contested at the Winter Olympic Games It was introduced at the 1928 Winter Olympics

    February 28, 2014

  • Oldest penguin in captivity was Rocky aged 29

    a rockhopper penguin

    February 27, 2014

  • 1884 A. A. Putnam 10 Years Police Judge xii. 104 The cattle..were a skeletony-looking herd

    February 27, 2014

  • Oto, Iowa

    Oto is a city in Woodbury County , Iowa , United States

    February 26, 2014

  • The zucchetto (/tsʊˈkɛtoʊ/; Italian pronunciation: t͡sukˈketto;1 Italian: "small gourd", from zucca, "pumpkin",2 figuratively referred to the human head3)

    February 24, 2014

  • Atlantic Giant (This variety holds the worlds record for the heaviest pumpkin: 2,009lbs by Ron Wallace in 2012http://www.bigpumpkins.com/ViewArticle.asp?id=175&gid=57)

    February 24, 2014

  • Pumpkin Island

    Pumpkin Island is a privately owned island on Keppel Bay near the Great Barrier Reef in Australia It is 13.8 | km | mi off the coast ...

    February 24, 2014

  • Slutty Pumpkin

    "Slutty Pumpkin" is the sixth episode in the first season of the television series How I Met Your Mother . It originally aired on October ...

    February 24, 2014

  • I will accept your ethnobotanic apology

    February 24, 2014

  • I added two,dont want to gip ya
    but you can get the rest from here



    Back Extensions: (129): -BOAT, -BOATS, -EON, -EONED#, -EONHOLE, -EONHOLED, -EONHOLER, -EONHOLERS, -EONHOLES, -EONHOLING, -EONING#, -EONITE, -EONITES, -EONRIES#, -EONRY#, -EONS, -EONWING, -EONWINGS, -FACE#, -FACES#, -FEED#, -FEEDS#, -FISH, -FISHES, -GED, -GERIES, -GERY, -GIE, -GIER, -GIES, -GIEST, -GIN, -GINESS, -GINESSES, -GING, -GINGS#, -GINS, -GISH, -GISHLY, -GISHNESS, -GISHNESSES, -GY, -GYBACK, -GYBACKED, -GYBACKING, -GYBACKS, -HEADED, -HEADEDLY, -HEADEDNESS, -HEADEDNESSES, -HT#, -HTED#, -HTING#, -HTLE#, -HTLES#, -HTS#, -LET, -LETS, -LIKE, -LING#, -LINGS#, -MAEAN#, -MEAN#, -MEAT#, -MEATS#, -MENT, -MENTAL#, -MENTARY, -MENTATION, -MENTATIONS, -MENTED, -MENTING, -MENTOSA#, -MENTOSAS#, -MENTS, -MIES, -MOID#, -MY, -NERATE#, -NERATED#, -NERATES#, -NERATING#, -NOLI, -NOLIA, -NOLIAS, -NOLIS, -NORA, -NORATE#, -NORATED#, -NORATES#, -NORATING#, -NORATION#, -NORATIONS#, -NUS, -NUT, -NUTS, -OUT, -OUTS, -PEN, -PENS, -S, -SCONCE#, -SCONCES#, -SKIN, -SKINS, -SNEY, -SNEYS, -SNIE#, -SNIES#, -SNY#, -STICK, -STICKED, -STICKER, -STICKERS, -STICKING, -STICKINGS#, -STICKS, -STIES, -STUCK#, -STY, -SWILL#, -SWILLS#, -TAIL, -TAILED, -TAILS, -WASH#, -WASHES#, -WEED, -WEEDS
    Double Extensions: (144): E-ON, S-HT#, S-OT, Y-HT#, EM-HT#, E-EAL, E-EAN, E-EIC, E-ENE, E-ONE, E-ONI, E-ONS, E-RAM, E-YNY, SER-O, S-HTS#, S-NEL#, S-OTS, BUSH-S, DES-HT#, E-AEAL#, E-AEAN#, E-AMIC#, E-ENIC, E-EOUS, E-ONES, E-ONIC, E-ONUS, E-RAMS, E-RAPH, GERO-A#, JERE-O#, SER-OS, S-HTED#, S-NELS#, DE-MENT#, DES-HTS#, E-AEOUS#, E-ENIST, E-ENOUS, E-ONISM, E-ONOUS, E-RAPHS, E-RAPHY, E-YNIES, E-YNOUS, GERO-AS#, HEDGE-S, JERE-OS#, MAL-HIA, RE-MENT, SER-OES, S-HTING#, CHAM-NON, DE-MENTS#, E-ASTRIA#, E-ASTRIC, E-ENESES, E-ENESIS, E-ENETIC, E-ENISTS, E-LOTTAL, E-LOTTIC, E-LOTTIS, E-ONISMS, E-RAPHED#, E-RAPHER, E-RAPHIC, PU-EROUS#, RE-MENTS, SER-INES, CHAM-NONS, DE-MENTED#, E-ASTRIAL#, E-ASTRIUM#, E-ENESIST#, E-ENETICS#, E-NATHOUS#, E-RAPHERS, E-RAPHIES, E-RAPHING#, E-RAPHIST, IM-NORATE#, OP-NERATE#, OP-NORATE#, RE-MENTED, SCA-EROUS#, SER-INOUS, DE-MENTING#, E-ENESISTS#, E-LOTTIDES#, E-LOTTISES, E-RAMMATIC, E-RAPHICAL, E-RAPHISTS, IM-NORATED#, IM-NORATES#, OP-NERATED#, OP-NERATES#, OP-NORATED#, OP-NORATES#, RE-MENTING, SAL-LOSSES, SAL-LOSSIS, E-ENETICIST#, E-RAMMATISE#, E-RAMMATISM, E-RAMMATIST, E-RAMMATIZE, IM-NORATING#, IM-NORATION#, OP-NERATING#, OP-NORATING#, OP-NORATION#, PSEUDE-RAPH, SER-INOUSLY, DE-MENTATION, E-ENETICALLY, E-ENETICISTS#, E-RAMMATICAL#, E-RAMMATISED#, E-RAMMATISER#, E-RAMMATISES#, E-RAMMATISMS, E-RAMMATISTS, E-RAMMATIZED, E-RAMMATIZER, E-RAMMATIZES, E-RAPHICALLY, HYPER-MENTED, IM-NORATIONS#, MAL-HIACEOUS#, OP-NORATIONS#, PSEUDE-RAPHA, PSEUDE-RAPHS, PSEUDE-RAPHY, SAL-LOSSISES#, DE-MENTATIONS, E-RAMMATISERS#, E-RAMMATISING#, E-RAMMATIZERS, E-RAMMATIZING, PSEUDE-RAPHIC#, PSEUDE-RAPHON

    February 24, 2014

  • two bob

    2. a circular pattern made on the ground by driving a car in a tight circle at high speed and causing the rear wheels to skid; a doughnut.

    my twenty cents worth

    February 23, 2014

  • bilby commented on the word orange

    Someone called John Field is responsible for this limerick:

    There once was a man of Fort Orange

    Who longed to make rhymes using orange.

    But he quit in despair,

    And hung himself in mid-air,

    Where he swings to and fro like a door 'inge.

    November 25, 2007

    February 23, 2014

  • Claire profile image

    Claire

    @clairebear0241

    Gotta love walking in rainish hail to get to volleyball

    February 21, 2014

  • The ant is tenacious, strong, aggressive, generous, and very meticulous. The Ants most pronounced characteristic is patience. An ant can wait patiently for hours, hidden in the sand, for its prey, or it can transport items larger than itself over long distances without giving up. Ants typically live in groups, and everything is done for the ant colony and the good of the community. The ant teaches that you will have everything you need and will receive it when you need it most. It is the symbol of basic trust. It knows that it will ultimately be rewarded for all its efforts. If your activities are for the common good, then you will receive back any energy that you have expended in amplified form. It may be, however, that you will have to put greater effort into the realization of your dreams and use your creativity.

    February 20, 2014

  • The horse shows both earthly strength and unearthly powers. It is regarded highly throughout the world and connected with the magical powers of shamans. With the help of the horse's speed, a person can cover long distances in a relatively short period of time. The horse has also made transportation of goods a lot easier. It is, therefore, the first and foremost totem animal of civilization. The power of an engine to this day is measured in horsepower. Riding a horse conveys a sense of freedom. It teaches that power cannot be attained by force, but rather that it is given to him who is willing to accept responsibility in a respectful manner. Just as the horse carries its rider on its back, the rider carries responsibility for everything around him. The power of the horse is the wisdom to remember all the steps in one's life and learn from them. This includes experiences from a previous life. Real power is strength used with wisdom. This requires love, compassion, and the willingness to share one's achievements and insights with others. It is important not to let our ego deny us access to this power.

    February 20, 2014

  • PARROT (ROSELLA/LORIKEET)

    The Parrot is a message of selfishness, self-centeredness and self importance. The Parrot is a showy and brightly colored identity whom has developed a self important illusion about his place in the hierarchy of life, and his journey is that of recognizing the imposter in himself. Parrots love the sound of their own opinionated voice, always trying to be heard over others. Despite the self-centered attitude and loud mouthed nature, Parrot people are mostly harmless, desperate to be acknowledged and seeking the attention that was failed to them in childhood. When Parrot appears it is an indication that there is a journey into the past required to heal the inner child.

    February 20, 2014

  • The wombat is a totem of resourcefulness, stability and foundation. Wombats have long claws adapted for digging. They teach us how to dig beneath the surface to acquire the resources needed for change. Strong and heavily built, with short powerful legs and strong claws the wombat holds the teachings of stability and foundation. They stand their ground in most situations and are not easily intimidated. Industrious, determined and very smart they have a large brain and know how to use it. These traits are inherent in wombat medicine people yet not always used. Wombat asks you to wake up and use the gifts that are your birth right. Use your will constructively but don't be too pushy in your determination to achieve. Wombats are playful and will folic with what seems like endless energy. They are also quite fast moving when they need to be. Their small ears hear frequencies and sounds unknown to humans and their small eyes can see what lies between the spaces. This indicates that their psychic vision and psychic hearing are fully developed. Those with this totem often find themselves in situations where their psychic skills are tested, criticized, ignored or praised. They are reminded to honor their truth and not be intimidated by others.

    February 20, 2014

  • The penguin signifies order, purpose and community. Penguins exude an air of properness and good manners, and are community coded where they will walk bolt upright forming several lines denoting a sense of order and purpose, determination and focus. Penguin people bear the same qualities and are bound to become great leaders within their group. Both male and female penguins bow to one another before entering or leaving the nest, and their human counterparts make fine partners and parents. The bow is a behavior demonstrated most often in pairs. Those with the Penguin totem are usually meticulous about their appearance and enjoy life styles related to high society. They are social and feel at ease in any type of situation. The Penguins message is to embrace and understand all realms of life, including the dreamtime (meditative) states. If the Penguin has appeared in your life prepare for a life altering course of mastery, fascination and transformation.

    February 20, 2014

  • The wombat is a totem of resourcefulness, stability and foundation. Wombats have long claws adapted for digging. They teach us how to dig beneath the surface to acquire the resources needed for change. Strong and heavily built, with short powerful legs and strong claws the wombat holds the teachings of stability and foundation. They stand their ground in most situations and are not easily intimidated. Industrious, determined and very smart they have a large brain and know how to use it. These traits are inherent in wombat medicine people yet not always used. Wombat asks you to wake up and use the gifts that are your birth right. Use your will constructively but don't be too pushy in your determination to achieve. Wombats are playful and will folic with what seems like endless energy. They are also quite fast moving when they need to be. Their small ears hear frequencies and sounds unknown to humans and their small eyes can see what lies between the spaces. This indicates that their psychic vision and psychic hearing are fully developed. Those with this totem often find themselves in situations where their psychic skills are tested, criticized, ignored or praised. They are reminded to honor their truth and not be intimidated by others.

    February 20, 2014

  • ECHIDNA

    In the medicine wheel, the Echidna takes the place of an innocent child. Its disposition is friendly and loving; it is never the instigator of trouble. If it happens to be attacked by another animal, which rarely occurs, its spines will protect it. The teaching of the Echidna embraces faith and trust. Since faith is said to move mountains, this is a very significant power to have. This animal teaches us to be open, to discover new miracles every day, and to free ourselves from the serious routine world of adults. The Echidna has held on to a child-like sense of wonder and its trust in the divine plan where everything will turn out all right. Its friendliness and openness can unlock the hearts of others in order to share love and joy.

    February 20, 2014

  • Vampyrus spectrum,does phil spector remind you of spectre

    February 18, 2014

  • bilby commented on the word sun

    "Even after all this time the sun never says to the earth 'You owe me'. Look what happens with a love like that, it lights the whole sky."

    - Hafiz.

    December 29, 2007

    February 13, 2014

  • hello,hold the phone ,but is wrong with

    abcedarian?

    February 10, 2014

  • where did you find quadrocopter?

    January 29, 2014

  • pescetarian

    noun a vegetarian who will eat fish.

    Also, pescatarian. variant of Latin pisces fish + -arian

    –pescetarianism, noun

    already in the dictionary !

    January 27, 2014

  • turkey slap

    –noun Colloquial (taboo) (of a male) the act of slapping a person's face with one's erect or semi-erect penis.

    January 8, 2014

  • staggering bob

    noun 1. a very young calf.

    2. meat from such a calf.

    January 3, 2014

  • slippery bob

    noun (in colonial bush cooking) a croquette made using kangaroo brains.

    January 3, 2014

  • •axe wound – badly wrapped kebab – bald man in a boat – bang hole – bat cave – bean – bearded clam – bearded oyster – beav – beaver – beefcurtain – beef curtain – beef flap – birth cannon – blue waffle – box – bread – buju – camel's foot – camel toe – candy – chach – cha cha – cherry – chocha – cho-cho – chonch – choot – clit – clown hole – clunge – cock – cock pocket – cock socket – coo – cooch – coochie – cookie – coosie – cooter – cuder – cunny – cunt – cunt hole – cunt punt – cutty – cut up – 'c' word – fanny – fish taco – flange – front bottom – fuck hole – fur burger – fur pie – gap – gash – growler – hair burger – hair pie – ham flap – ham wallet – hatchet wound – hooded lady – hoo-hoo – hot pocket – ill na-na – incision – jute – kitty – kooch – kooter – kuder – lip – love cave – love taco – lunchmeat – mangina – man in the boat – man in the boat, the – meat curtains – meat flap – meatwallet – meat wallet – minge – moose knuckle – muff – muffin – na-na – nappy dugout – neden – ninja foot – nookie – open wound – pink – pink canoe – pink sausage wallet – pink taco – pink velvet sausage wallet – piss flaps – pookie – poon – poonaner – poonani – poontang – poon tang pie – pootang – poo tang – pooter – pootie tang – prison purse – promised land, the – punani – punanni – puss – pussy – putang – pu-tang – quif – quiff – quim – quivering mound of love pudding – roast beef – roast beef curtains – slit – smush mitten – snatch – snizz – soggy box – sprained vagina – tampon tunnel – tang – trim – tunnel of love – twat – twitchet – V – vadge – vag – vagine – vagoo – vajayjay – va-jay-jay – vajizzle – vertical smile – whisker biscuit – whispering eye – wizard sleeve – woo – woogit – wugget – wuss

    December 30, 2013

  • laari is in ospd 4 and lari and laree

    December 20, 2013

  • Etymology: The Old English gingiber, gingifer(e are directly < late Latin gingiber = the earlier zingiber(i, < Greek ζιγγίβερις, apparently < Prakrit siŋgabēra < Sanskrit çṛŋgavēra, which has the appearance of a compound of çṛŋga horn and vēra body, but is supposed by Yule to be an etymologizing perversion (suggested by the antler-like form of the root) of a Dravidian name, a prehistoric form of the Malayalam synonym inchi-ver ( < inchi root). The Middle English forms seem to be readoptions chiefly through Old French gimgibre, gingimbre (modern French gingembre) = Provençal gingibre, gingebre, Spanish gengibre, agengibre, Portuguese gengivre, Italian zenzevero, zenzero, gengero, gengiovo.

    Other forms of this widely diffused word are Arabic zanjabīl (already in the Qur'an); Middle Dutch gengber (from Spanish or Portuguese) whence Dutch gember; also (with loss of the initial consonant as in German enzian from Latin gentiāna) Middle High German ingewer (German ingwer), Middle Low German engewer, Danish ingefær, Swedish ingefära.

    December 15, 2013

  • 1865 J. R. Lowell Lett. (1894) I. 348 There, by ginger! I meant to give the merest hint of a sentiment, and I have gone splash into a moral.

    1. The rhizome of the tropical plant Zingiber officinale, remarkable for its hot spicy taste; used when dried and ground in cookery and as a medicine; also preserved in syrup or candied as a sweetmeat.

    December 15, 2013

  • 1881 H. James Portrait of Lady xxxii, Disaccustomed to living with an invalid.

    December 13, 2013

  • fire front/ˈfaɪə frʌnt/ (say 'fuyuh frunt)

    noun the part of a bushfire within which continuous flaming combustion is taking place.

    Also, firefront. [by analogy with a military front

    December 7, 2013

  • fireground/ˈfaɪəgraʊnd/ (say 'fuyuhgrownd)

    noun the area where a wildfire is actively burning.

    what part of tassie are u from?

    December 7, 2013

  • fire cam/ˈfaɪə kæm/ (say 'fuyuh kam)

    noun a camera mounted on an observation tower which registers the smoke and flames from a bushfire and triggers an alert, while also providing a record of activity in the area, as for identifying arsonists.

    December 7, 2013

  • Yet Americo Castro, who coined the word convivencia to describe the life of the three faiths in the caliphate of Cordoba, wrote, in his book The Structure of Spanish History: "Each of the three peoples of the peninsula saw itself forced to live for eight centuries together with the other two at the same time as it passionately desired their extermination."

    December 6, 2013

  • http://basorexia.org/content/what-basorexia

    December 1, 2013

  • please add any likeable/dislikeable cricket sledging quotes

    November 25, 2013

  • blepharoplastic

    November 23, 2013

  • abdominoplastic on pg 2 of the Macquarie Dictionary 6th edition 2013

    November 17, 2013

  • thx alexz,bilby,racehead,ruzuzu

    heart of the truth

    heart of London

    November 13, 2013

  • darg/dag/ (say dahg)

    noun 1. a day's work.

    2. Mining a production quota.

    –verb (i) 3. Mining to record one's daily output.

    Middle English dawerk, Old English dægweorc day-work

    October 24, 2013

  • lacerant is a nonce word Mr Zeke

    What was James Joyce' intended meaning?

    October 6, 2013

  • agalwood

    September 23, 2013

  • Maccas is capitalized but I do have macca,a macadamia nut.

    Are you able to open my large list?

    September 10, 2013

  • “Gibbery, gibbery gab, The women had a confab And demanded the rights To wear the tights.

    September 6, 2013

  • I would love to add gobshite to my shit list but all my lists will not come up.

    who else is experiencing this problem?

    feedback icon better at the top not the left hand part of screen

    August 3, 2013

  • futureproof/ˈfjutʃəpruf/ (say 'fjoohchuhproohf)

    adjective 1. secure, whatever might happen in the future: a futureproof power supply.

    –verb (t) 2. to make secure, whatever might happen in the future: to futureproof the city's water supply.

    –futureproofing, noun

    August 2, 2013

  • wearproof

    underproof

    pickproof

    dustproof does not require a hyphen

    July 30, 2013

  • chaos is in the eye of the beholder

    July 22, 2013

  • bidgee widgee the burr of this plant is called buzzy

    July 21, 2013

  • anyone heard of wormburner in relation to cricket?

    July 16, 2013

  • “My mum calls dog poos mr.whippies”

    @BeausSnapbacks

    November 11, 2012

  • does spag bol make sense?I knew I should add alla

    for the precision.

    thanks for pointing this out

    November 6, 2012

  • Looks like you are technically correct but

    I am now including pasta puttanesca.Furthermore Id like

    a show of hands to those who textually mine from paper

    text.Not interested in Wikipedia mining per se.Id also like to

    hear why people textually mine? Ive heard one person say they do it because its fun and they are crazy.Perhaps there is an

    element of addiction here.

    Having spent a good 4hrs on pasta made me want to spend

    time with my mother and learn how to make potato gnocchi the

    artisanal way

    October 30, 2012

  • puttanesca style

    October 30, 2012

  • 1871 J. Earle Philol. Eng. Tongue xii. 535 All languages use greater freedom of collocation in poetry than in prose.

    October 29, 2012

  • Im really sorry to inform you that "amino acid" is a noun but

    amino functions as an adjective ie what type of acid

    So Im not convinced of your noun noun approach but Im open to correction.You seem to be hellbent on being number one lister

    here.What is the purpose of your investigation?

    Okay lets go down the list, bighorn sheep,not really science to me

    there.Personally I cant think of all the species

    So you are stealing/borrowing/kidnapping to increase your

    primacy as a word lister,at least you acknowledged your source

    and didnt take the 10,000 on offer.

    October 29, 2012

  • Dear Uglyasrobin,

    Thankyou for the deep concern you have for my lists.

    Actions speak louder than words.I have removed all unimaginative lists.

    How true that lexicographers are thieves/kidnappers.Until the next

    wordhiccupnik ....keep collocating

    October 28, 2012

  • headbanger is not legal to play in scrabbble but headbanging is

    October 23, 2012

  • fracteur = mining gelignite

    October 22, 2012

  • 1891 N. Gould Double Event 117 (Farmer) People jammed inside like herrings in a barrel.

    October 19, 2012

  • aftereye,aleye,silvereye,eyewink,outjockeyed

    October 17, 2012

  • banjolele does appear on Collins online English Dictionary as a recent entry

    you can see lots of new words

    http://www.collinsdictionary.com/submission

    see oojamaflip

    October 15, 2012

  • gonk konk monk ponk clonk cronk quonk skronk tronk onkus

    conky donko honky bonked bonking donkeywork monkey

    monkeyshine shonkiest

    October 9, 2012

  • what about retrocedence ,retrocessive retrodicted retroflexing

    retrograded retrograding retrophiliac retropulsive retroreflection

    retrosexual retrospected retrospective retrospectively

    retroverse retroverted and what about retroaction or retroactiveness

    retrospectivity retrogressively

    and bar(retro)us bar(retro)usly

    October 6, 2012

  • “The pukamani poles are of a quality not on show anywhere else in Australia or the world,”

    “A set of ornately carved wooden funeral poles are the same style of those still used by the people of the Tiwi Islands for the pukamani ceremony, which is believed to send the soul into the spirit world to live on forever.”

    October 5, 2012

  • pukamani pole a pole prepared and painted for use in a Tiwi funeral ceremony

    has been looked up 673 times

    October 5, 2012

  • I see historic election occurs in 3 of your lists

    September 25, 2012

  • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fucking,_Austria

    September 25, 2012

  • microhierax is not listed in a dictionary,

    could you please remove it from my bird list.

    Thankyou

    September 20, 2012

  • at least 78 playable scrabble words in wordnik

    September 20, 2012

  • alectryomancy

    Divination using a cock, typically by interpreting patterns in its pecking at grains of corn.

    September 13, 2012

  • what about ho(mony)m would you accept mony

    inside a word?

    September 13, 2012

  • geneva is Hollands gin and playable in scrabble

    September 10, 2012

  • Geneva hat

    Geneva mechanism

    Geneva motion

    Geneva movement

    Geneva set

    Geneva set ruff

    Geneva stop

    Geneva watch

    September 10, 2012

  • abcee

    abcoulomb

    September 8, 2012

  • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3a-pMzZkWEE

    someone using the word adimpleate

    September 7, 2012

  • is that another way of saying fork it

    September 6, 2012

  • I smashed my olecranon,and the physiotherapist used to

    measure my elbow angle with a goniometer.

    foretriangle

    cangle

    September 4, 2012

  • skutterudite is a good word

    September 3, 2012

  • you dont have the Gorgeted Puffleg

    September 2, 2012

  • I ruminate

    therefore Im a ruminant

    stomach that if you can

    dont paunch me out

    abomasum

    fardel bag

    August 31, 2012

  • WORDIE

    Scottish

    A word, esp. a little or slight one.

    1718 A. Ramsay Christ's-kirk on Green iii. 30 She her Man, like a Lamy led Hame, wi a well wail'd Wordy.

    1785 R. Burns Poems & Songs (1968) I. 124 A pack..Wha..Can easy, wi' a single wordie, Louse h-ll upon me.

    a1840 J. Baillie Woo'd & Married (song) 38 Weel waled were his wordies.

    1932 R. L. Cassie Sangs 25 We pauchle on, we peenge an' pine For want o' wordies wee.

    1979 P. Reading Coll. Poems (1995) I. 223 Speak to me, Cocky. Say a little wordie.

    2000 Aberdeen Evening Press (Nexis) 21 July 18 He's comin ower tae hae a wordie wie' us!

    August 31, 2012

  • How does one find which " A word is the most listed ?

    August 30, 2012

  • does not mean anything.

    They decided to standardise all Maori

    words with an ess.Before that some took an ess and

    some did not.

    Funny how oi gets 20 hits, but here it means a grey-faced petrel

    August 30, 2012

  • SOWPODS

    August 30, 2012

  • one is from watership down and harry potter

    August 30, 2012

  • 32 more - some slang too

    August 30, 2012

  • handle with care,there are 405 frogs all up in Australia

    August 29, 2012

  • IKEA makes the valid word kaie an obsolete form of key

    must be L(ikea)ble

    August 29, 2012

  • supercalafajalistickespeealadojus, supercalafajalistickespialadojus, 19– supercalafragalisticexpialidocious, 19– supercalafragilisticexpialadocious, 19–

    supercalafragilisticexpialidocious, 20– supercalafragalisticexpialadocious.

    these are all variants in the OED

    August 29, 2012

  • I was thinking of that song "with eyes wide open"

    thanks for your contributions

    I see you have found a way to view lists you love

    why didnt I think of that?

    August 29, 2012

  • platypus gets 44 hits while wombats get 43 hits

    kangaroo gets 30 koala 18

    some of these creatures have multiple names

    August 29, 2012

  • thanks.

    I knew you would filter what you wanted

    August 28, 2012

  • scrabble is a valid word in scrabble

    as well as hardscrabble

    August 28, 2012

  • any other business

    as they say in the business

    be in the business of, to

    be minding one's own business, to

    be the business, to

    business acumen

    business administration

    business affair

    business agent

    business angel

    business approach

    business associate

    business as usual

    business-based

    business before pleasure

    business bringer

    business card

    business casual

    business centre

    business college

    business committee

    business correspondent

    business course

    business-critical

    business customer

    business cycle

    business day

    business deal

    business dealing

    business degree

    business district

    business doctor

    business double

    business edge

    business efficiency

    business empire

    business English

    business ethic

    business executive

    business-friendly

    business getter

    business girl

    business graphic

    business guru

    business habit

    business head

    business hours

    business house

    business incubator

    business interest

    business interruption

    business investment

    business is business

    business jet

    business leader

    business letter

    business life

    business-looking

    business lunch

    business luncheon

    business magnate

    business manage

    business management

    business manager

    business meeting

    business-minded

    business model

    business mogul

    business morality

    business office

    business of the stage

    business operation

    business opportunity

    business-oriented

    business owner

    business park

    business part

    business partner

    business pass

    business plan

    business practice

    business process redesign

    business process re-engineering

    business proposition

    business rate

    business reason

    business redouble

    business-related

    business reply

    business school

    business sector

    business shirt

    business shoe

    business start-up

    business strategy

    business student

    business studies

    business style

    business suit

    business-suited

    business teacher

    business tourism

    business tourist

    business transaction

    business travel

    business traveller

    business trip

    business tycoon

    business union

    business unionism

    business unionist

    business unit

    business venture

    business view

    business wear

    ˈbusiness-wise

    business wit

    business world

    carry a business, to

    do (also †be at) one's business, to

    do a person's business, to

    do business, to

    do business with (a person), to

    do (one's) business, to

    do the business for a person, to

    do the business, to

    for business

    get (also settle) down to business, to

    get the business, to

    give (a person) the business, to

    give business to, to

    go about one's business, to

    hours of business

    house of business

    in business

    known in the business as

    know one's business, to

    letter of business

    look the business, to

    make it one's business, to

    man of business

    mean business, to

    mind one's own business, to

    on business

    person's business, a

    place of business

    send about one's business, to

    stroke of business

    take care of business, to

    woman of business

    August 28, 2012

  • technically you need another word to justify your comment.

    August 27, 2012

  • ship-lap n. (a) a form of joint in carpentry made by halving (see quots. and halving n.1 2, and cf. half-lap at lap n.3 2b); (b) boards interlocked by rebates, used esp. for cladding.

    1854 A. E. Baker Gloss. Northamptonshire Words, Ship-lap, a carpenter's term for a mode of uniting the end of one piece of wood to the side of another, at right angles, by a bevil-shaped bearing on the upper edge.

    1939 W. Faulkner Wild Palms 15 The flimsy walls (they were not even tongue-and-groove..but were of ship-lap).

    1977 Cornish Times 19 Aug. 13/2 (advt.) Our..plumbing, shiplap claddings and drainage systems are always in stock.

    August 27, 2012

  • click on conjunctive-adverbs click on resetee click on 182 lists he has

    did this help?

    August 27, 2012

  • drupaceous

    August 26, 2012

  • regular juxtapositions-interesting

    bilateral trade agreement occurs once in the OED but not in its

    own right,under "switch"

    August 26, 2012

  • aarrghh

    roughhew

    roughhewn

    roughhewed

    roughhewing

    roughhouse

    roughhoused

    roughhousing

    all these can be played in scrabble

    August 26, 2012

  • a two year old sheep is a bident

    a three year old sheep is a thrinter

    explain birn to me

    August 26, 2012

  • some nice cricket stuff here Mr Bilby

    linseed oil I like

    whats a toe-cracker?

    here one for you, supersub

    August 26, 2012

  • cricketana

    Writings or items of gossip about cricket; cricket talk

    I love it

    August 26, 2012

  • a very very good list

    August 25, 2012

  • how did you miss hircine?

    August 25, 2012

  • why didn't you list them all ie cougar names?

    August 24, 2012

  • first cat list ive seen

    August 24, 2012

  • first words spoken were a palindrome

    madam Im adam

    August 24, 2012

  • Damn I was going to add Mary Poppins, first memorable film I saw as

    a child

    August 24, 2012

  • of course Penguin is a famous trademark for

    publishing books.

    Will you be wearing penguin suits for your get togethers?

    August 24, 2012

  • can you create a box of plants in a grid 5x5

    I offer this as a challege to anyone out there

    common names please

    August 23, 2012

  • just penguins,their names,and

    anything to do with penguin like a

    place in Tasmania,a nun,aeronautics,

    penguin association,what films remind you of penguins? One in 50,000 turn out brown.There are 17 species

    August 23, 2012

  • about one in three insects is a beetle

    166 families in coleoptera

    370,000 known species

    weevils are the biggest family

    y

    you

    August 22, 2012

  • No I havent,How many breeds do they have in the book?

    Its always a buzz when you can see them .

    August 22, 2012

  • i tried maasdamer today

    August 21, 2012

  • you lost me at axridda

    August 21, 2012

  • croodle to murmur like a dove

    bl(oodle)tter

    August 21, 2012

  • Im thinking there are around 400 breeds

    August 21, 2012

  • squirrel is two syllables

    August 20, 2012

  • 1992 Farmers Weekly 14 Aug. 44/1 Slugs will have to contend with novel chemistry this autumn, in the form of Genesis, a recently approved molluscicide.

    August 20, 2012

  • whats abra?

    August 20, 2012

  • where did you find bemidewiskawed?

    August 18, 2012

  • I have played hiddenite and syenite and apatite in Scrabble

    So how long did it take to do this list?

    August 17, 2012

  • where is the evidence for petrol being a trademark?

    August 15, 2012

  • I think its frigidaire

    August 15, 2012

  • BVD is a brand of men's underwear,

    August 15, 2012

  • Trojan was a contraceptive sheath

    First registered as a proprietary term in the U.S. on 26 Apr. 1927.

    August 15, 2012

  • U.S. Patent 0,621,195, "Navigable balloon". 14 March 1899. Ferdinand Graf Zeppelin.

    That zeppelin was referred to as a Navigable balloon.

    August 15, 2012

  • teratorn a prehistoric bird as tall as a human being with a wingspan of over four metres

    August 11, 2012

  • I like muck up day

    Have a look at my list Australian

    August 11, 2012

  • you have dunlop twice and edam also

    August 8, 2012

  • crucifix is a gymnastics move and a ambo is an ambulance too

    August 7, 2012

  • guqin is also qin

    August 7, 2012

  • makes me think of jesus

    August 7, 2012

  • crumpet with vegemite

    did you know vegemite is playable in tournament scrabble?

    keep seeing your bilby fingerprints all over wordnik

    and ruzuzu

    August 1, 2012

  • ive got 400 items for everything hats

    i added akubra

    ill let you add sunhat

    August 1, 2012

  • check your reference for abacot (ghost word)

    http://www.worldwidewords.org/weirdwords/ww-aba1.htm

    August 1, 2012

  • I have over 400 items on hats and I am from the land downunder.

    ruzuzu led me to your list

    Im indebted to my wife for cork hat

    you can google me logosxxx

    I helped put together the last edition of the scrabble book

    August 1, 2012

  • i added fijian

    July 31, 2012

  • I just added 29 to your list

    Our Australian swimmers had a shock loss

    July 30, 2012

  • I just added Meles meles,Lutra lutra,Martes martes,Capreolus capreolus

    I have another 29 to add when you contact me

    July 29, 2012

  • does this count?

    See Damaliscus pygargus ssp. pygargus

    July 29, 2012

  • Bilby was a legal word in scrabble in 2007

    I was born on an Italian ship

    The ship was SS Roma

    My middle name is francesco and I am bald on top

    I have been to Tasmania in 1986 two weeks

    still studying hair

    the anagram of tomatoes is ostomate

    July 27, 2012

  • hair grows after we die,so are we really dead?

    a tonsure is a sort of a bald

    some women really dig bald

    skinheads are as rare as rocking horse manure around here

    July 27, 2012

  • i guess i will. Im from Australia.Send me list on" bald"

    who can forget romper stomper film?

    July 27, 2012

  • geisha hairstyles katsuyama is one of about 6

    http://e-vint.com/jhair.html

    July 27, 2012

  • 2. In form Mohican (also mohican). Designating a hairstyle in which the head is shaved except for a strip of hair running centrally from the middle of the forehead to the back of the neck.The Mohican hairstyle imitates a traditional deer-hair topknot worn by males of certain north-eastern American Indian peoples; the specific attribution to the Mohican peoples probably derives from the writings of J. Fenimore Cooper, either through conventionalized illustrations in certain editions or through film adaptations of the novels.

    The Mohican is now usually distinguished from the Mohawk (Mohawk n. 4) by the fact that the strip of hair is grown long and stiffened to stand erect or in spikes (a style associated particularly with punks in the 1970s and 1980s); however, in earlier use the two terms appear to have been more or less synonymous (Mohican being more usual in Britain, Mohawk more usual in the United States).

    July 27, 2012

  • 1990 Elle (U.S. ed.) Aug. 142/1 Within a few years the world knew about dreadlocks, the medusalike hairstyle favored by Rastas.OED

    July 27, 2012

  • Zimmer

    used to be in the lower case

    July 26, 2012

  • Im after generic ones that are playable in scrabble.

    have a look at my list trademark kalayzich.

    I do in depth analysis

    you might be shocked whats playable in the lowercase

    July 26, 2012

  • woodbine

    b. An Englishman, esp. a soldier, considered as a habitual smoker of Woodbine cigarettes. Austral. slang

    1919 W. H. Downing Digger Dial. 54 Woodbine, an English soldier, so called from the name of a cheap brand of cigarette favored by Englishmen

    July 25, 2012

  • kaylied British slang for

    intoxicated drunk

    June 19, 2009

  • kaal South African meaning naked literally bare arsed

    June 19, 2009

  • its an adjective meaning genuine or real also jannock

    June 19, 2009

  • a sign which

    represents a word

    May 26, 2009

  • a large monitor lizard

    May 26, 2009

  • a Chinese

    musical instrument with seven strings

    also spelt qin

    May 25, 2009

  • Currently, there are 797 Google hits for "epicaricacy," and it is cited in the following online dictionaries, cited by Onelook: Wikipedia, Worthless Word for the Day, Wiktionary, and Luciferous Logolepsy. On Wordcraft alone we've mentioned it 256 times.

    May 23, 2009

  • Today, I shall promote epicaricacy: pleasure engendered by the pain or misfortune of others. Or, when I for some reason am feeling less pedantic, English for schadenfreude.

    May 23, 2009

  • noni is a

    plant whose fruit is used as a health supplement

    May 22, 2009

  • a rock

    musician

    who performs loud harsh music

    May 22, 2009

  • the runt

    bird in a brood of chickens

    May 22, 2009

  • it East African for teacher Swahili

    May 22, 2009

  • South African

    a large sea bream

    May 22, 2009

  • Indian,

    down with,death to used as a part of a slogan in India an interjection

    May 22, 2009

  • slang for

    an unattractive person

    May 22, 2009

  • it means mass murder

    May 22, 2009

  • NZ a person from the Waikato

    May 22, 2009

  • a severe reprimand or scolding

    May 22, 2009

  • who is the sherang around here ie the head boss

    May 21, 2009

  • dunger is an old decrepit car informal NZ slang

    May 21, 2009

  • unattractive woman

    May 21, 2009

  • can be used as a noun as in

    To hear some recent recordings, please visit the hundred inevitables at myspace.com.

    May 21, 2009

  • Unununium was discovered by S. Hofmann et al. collaboration at the Heavy Ion Research Laboratory (Gesellschaft für Schwerionenforschung

    May 21, 2009

  • Incarvillea likes a sunny spot and a well cultivated soil. Incarvillea is an excellent border plant and is very easy to combine with shrubs or other kind of ...

    May 21, 2009

  • IMBIZO is a Zulu word that means “gathering” or “meeting

    May 21, 2009

  • you can expect to see this marine food fish more than twice a year if you play tournament scrabble

    May 20, 2009

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