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Post by Leb on Dec 30, 2002 9:39:02 GMT -5
I even hear that the Oxford dictionary made "D'oh" a word. But still, Webster's rules!
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Post by calvinseviltwin on Dec 30, 2002 10:24:23 GMT -5
LOL!
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Post by Leb on Dec 31, 2002 19:30:53 GMT -5
I wonder what the meaning of "D'oh" is.
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Post by calvinseviltwin on Jan 1, 2003 19:18:43 GMT -5
Let's look it up!
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Post by Lappi on Jan 5, 2003 10:24:01 GMT -5
LOL
D'oh - A phrase used when there is frustration...
^^
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Post by chansey104 on Jan 5, 2003 11:59:18 GMT -5
Well, shall and will seem to definitly have differences.
But then why do people use them interchangibly? Maybe it is like momentarily. In the sentence "We will land momentarily," it used to mean that we'd land and take off again as soon as we hit the ground. Now it means we'll land soon. It probably came from so many people using the word incorrectly.
And about Oxford having D'oh - oxford contains all the english words ever published.
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Post by Leb on Jan 18, 2003 23:09:17 GMT -5
Every English word ever published? Even "chimerical"?
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Post by Lappi on Jan 25, 2003 12:44:27 GMT -5
;D . . . umm . . . I was going to say something, but I'd rather not
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Post by calvinseviltwin on Jan 25, 2003 14:12:52 GMT -5
Every English word ever published? Even "chimerical"? Oh my
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Post by Leb on Jan 25, 2003 21:43:58 GMT -5
Chimerical is a real English word, but it's archaic.
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Post by calvinseviltwin on Jan 26, 2003 9:02:33 GMT -5
Intresting.
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Post by Leb on Jan 26, 2003 10:26:32 GMT -5
It means "imaginary" or "fantastic," and comes from the mythical Greek monster the Chimaeric, which had like the head of a lion, body of a goat, and wings of a dragon, or something like that.
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Post by calvinseviltwin on Feb 6, 2003 16:19:36 GMT -5
It means "imaginary" or "fantastic," and comes from the mythical Greek monster the Chimaeric, which had like the head of a lion, body of a goat, and wings of a dragon, or something like that. Sounds like a Griffin.
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Post by 843 on Feb 17, 2003 3:03:43 GMT -5
Shall is used with I and we Will is used with he, she, it They and you can be used with both.
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Post by mushroom on Mar 3, 2003 19:08:56 GMT -5
It means "imaginary" or "fantastic," and comes from the mythical Greek monster the Chimaeric, which had like the head of a lion, body of a goat, and wings of a dragon, or something like that. I thought it was the Chimera, with the front feet and head of a lion, back feet and body of a goat, and tail of a snake...I could be wrong, though.
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