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Post by Poe's Coats Host Toast on Apr 22, 2024 9:46:00 GMT -5
So is your comment's font.
*onomatopoeia-boom!*
Also, I just realized "onomatopoeia" sounds like someone falling down the stairs while yelling out.
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Post by Hego T. Tablespoon on Apr 22, 2024 12:14:58 GMT -5
From what I gather, a toe suffered greatly to transform language as a whole.
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Post by twigz on Apr 22, 2024 17:15:39 GMT -5
From what I gather, a toe suffered greatly to transform language as a whole.
a toe? the only language you need to know is the one that states your mum's a hoe
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Post by Hego T. Tablespoon on Apr 22, 2024 18:49:52 GMT -5
From what I gather, a toe suffered greatly to transform language as a whole.
a toe? the only language you need to know is the one that states your mum's a hoe Oh dear, I didn't know I shared ancestry with the famous garden tool.
Then again, perhaps it is another disguise I have yet to record in my literary ventures concerning that infamous organization of arsonists.
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Post by Reba on Apr 24, 2024 9:21:37 GMT -5
i just saw Aristophanes write laughter as "aiboiboi" (αιβοιβοι) i've been having fun trying to imagine how a laugh could sound like that. now i've seen sniffing food as "uhu uhu uhu", which one translator translated as "hnf hnf hnf". it's worth mentioning the most famous Aristophanes onomatopoeia, which is the sound of frogs: brekekekex koax koax.
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Post by HAL 10,000 on Apr 24, 2024 14:24:22 GMT -5
Crackle, crinkle, crunch, hiss, jingle, rustle, splash.
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Post by Hego T. Tablespoon on Apr 27, 2024 22:25:20 GMT -5
Puff puff. Huff huff.
Achoo.
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Post by twigz on Apr 28, 2024 4:50:07 GMT -5
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Post by Reba on Apr 30, 2024 9:19:21 GMT -5
rereading an asoue book for the first time since i was 14, and i quite enjoyed this bit. The children heard the gloppy sound of its chubby feet sloshing through the rain, gumsh, gumsh, gumsh, gumsh. But then, instead of a gumsh, there was a skittle-wat as the person stepped on Aunt Josephine's atlas, which slipped from under its feet.
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