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A Fungus Among Us
A Gorge of Candy Whistles
A Side of Blog
A state of alarm or dread
Another Holiday Meal
Apple Oaths of Honor
Are you O-fucking-K?
Artificial Intelligence
Bashing Blog Fronts
Biting the Back of PETA
Blog Water Marinade
Breeding The Disease
Cannibalistic Fascism
Curds, tallow and oats
Digesting the Readers
Double Spades Effect
Enraptured Beef Tallow
Everything In Moderation
Flight of the Fancy Pants
Fruity Pebble Massacre
Gathering Storm Clouds
Grim is the Reaper
High Fact Content
Idiot's Parade
If Wishes Were Horsies
Incoherent Laugh Track
Jumpin' Jeepers!
Just Add Sploosh
Like Peeing in a Pod
No Peanutbutter & Jelly
Pennywise & Poundfoolish
Pleonastic Redundancy
Raise the Fist
Rice in the Lemon Butter
Rich In Fatty Soy
Salt Pork on Wry
Seedless Crass Preserves
Shit House Bricks
Shower Tag
Shun not the blog
Sixtysix Soma Ships
Slap Happy Chap Caps
Soggy Blog Bottom
Spastic Plastic
Spleen and Ideal
Sugar On My Elbows
Tabacco Stained Toe Nails
Tepid Predilection
The Mighty Palimpsest
The Pedantic Opus
The Spider's Bollocks
They eat Mallomars
This aint no tree!
Three on a Spike
Tragic Reverie
Undigestable Candy Corn
Weebles SHOULD fall down
What have you to impart?
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deja entendu
Saturday, 2 October 2004
The Effluent Atramentous Melange
Mood:  silly
Now Playing: Swans-Like a Drug
Topic: A Gorge of Candy Whistles

Perhaps Looking-glass milk isn't good to drink.

Am I puttering out? It seems like it takes me forever to collect and gather decent content
for my daily entry. And I don't use anything online. No. I don't cheat. I use books and my
? brain. It is a half brain in the morning.

But I shalln't look any further... I have found former jobs of famous (or infamous) people:

10 Former Occupations:

May I add that you look particularly lovely today? Well, you do. Go look in the mirror and
you will see what I mean. You just got up, you say? You could have fooled me. I think you
look marvelous!

It's 9:29 am here in TX and it is dark. The thunder is a-rollin'. It promises to be a great day.
The humidity is the only thing that could ruin a day like this. And it probably wil, being TX &
all. Geez, just another reminder that I so hate this place. Even the confines of my little world
aren't enough to make me forget that I am where I am... I won't go on. It is pointless, and
furthermore I can do nothing to change it, so what's the use in bitching, right?

You've actually made it this far? Damn. You deserve a prize for that! How about some Chuck
E. Cheese tokens? Or maybe something even more useless like a feather mop? A mud bucket?
No, I know... how about a 100% cruelty-free tofu flavored cardboard box for that late morning
snack? The choice is yours, my friend.

Go out and begin your day now with a nefarious smile lying about your face, you know you're
up to something, like no-good!

========================================================
Saturday, 02 October 2004 - 6:59 PM CDT
Name: the mexican
E-Mail: taquito3217@sbcglobal.net

how did one of hitlers most trusted soldiers (heinrich himmler) go from being a clerk in an agricultural store to being
a man known for the murder of millions  of jews

========================================================

Saturday, 02 October 2004 - 7:13 PM CDT
Name: jfkhaos
E-Mail: theghostofjfkhaos@hotmail.com

Do you see the ironies in this there story?  Genghis Khan conquered a majority of a continent where one of the
main industries now is goatherding? Did Nostradamus prophesize all of the assorted varities of jam we now have?
Did Al Capone sell piano boxes for bodies before he needed them himself? In all probability, Goebbels worked
somewhere where Jews were employed. Himmler shoveled shit (ha ha ha) and turned into a prime grade A-1 shit!
Lenin was a lawyer, and therefore changed the law to serve him and not the people. Stalin led the erasure of religion
in Russia that is now only starting to come back. Don't know the family Kray, I must say. Pol Pot led a brutal regime
contradictory to all ideology of his religion. If Gerald Ford was the model, why was his wife the one who turned to
drugs (yeah Betty, we all know you swilled rubbing alcohol!)

And now I bid my fond adieu....



Posted by punksoup at 9:45 AM CDT
Updated: Sunday, 3 October 2004 8:45 AM CDT
Friday, 1 October 2004
My Casuistic Digression
Mood:  smelly
Now Playing: Magnetic Fields-Asleep and Dreaming
Topic: The Pedantic Opus

Blog-O-Lantern

5:41 am and I am just starting to make an entry. That's insane. I usually have 75% of this crap done by now.
I have been trying to grab an awesome picture for today's header but I am slow about these things sometimes
and I lose myself looking at other whatnots. Oh well, I say.

This is by far my favorite month of the year! Yes indeed, this will do it. October. It just sounds nice, the way it
rolls off the tongue and dances about in glib delight...

  • At the turn of the century, cities were overcrowded and Halloween marked the time to let off steam by
    playing practical jokes such as turning over out-houses. By the 1930's things had gotten out of hand and
    serious damage was being done on Halloween. There was a movement to have children go door to door
    and ask for candy as an alternative to vandalism.
  • October has had 31 days since the time of the Roman emperor Augustus.
  • In 1800's people started to have parties. Part of the celebrations included costumes, fortune telling and
    games such as bobbing for apples.
  • Jack-o-lantern aka Ignes fatui. [L. ignis = fire + fatuus = foolish.] So called in allusion to its tendency to
    mislead travelers.] 1. A phosphorescent light that appears, in the night, over marshy ground, supposed
    to be occasioned by the decomposition of animal or vegetable substances, or by some inflammable gas;
    popularly called also Will-with-the-wisp, or Will-o'-the-wisp, and Jack-with-a-lantern, or Jack-o'-lantern.
  • <-- Interesting -->
    ? Each square inch of human skin consists of twenty feet of blood vessels.
    ? A Saudi Arabian woman can get a divorce if her husband doesn't give her coffee.
    ? Barbers at one time combined shaving and haircutting with bloodletting and pulling
    teeth. The white stripes on a field of red that spiral down a barber pole represent the
    bandages used in the bloodletting.
    ? Humans are the only animals that copulate face to face.

    I really want this entry to be interactive, but I don't have much to offer at the moment. Perhaps if I sit here for
    a bit longer, something will happen... (moments passing...) yes, it is decided... vocabulary for your response!

    nudements, n. - rules of pornography
    obstilibut, n. - the end of a syringe which points away from the face
    rackle, v. - to grate on one's nerves
    trigatory, adj. - an arrangement of three, ex. He entered into a trigatory relationship.
    yukatory, adj. - relating to things vulgar or disgusting

    Have fun with those. And if for some reason you are unable to post through the "post" link, email your post to me
    instead. I can not say this enough! That is all one must do! You will see your post here like everyone elses!

    ========================================================

    Friday, 01 October 2004 - 8:05 AM CDT
    Name: jfkhaos
    E-Mail: theghostofjfkhaos@hotmail.com

    So I am expanding because I am growing new blood vessels....a likely excuse.

    According to the nudements of the show, the trigatory relationship between Hubert, Marjory, and Salad Fingers
    provided a yukatory display of soot and poo.
    ========================================================

    Friday, 01 October 2004 - 3:05 PM CDT
    Name: the mexican
    E-Mail: taquito3217@sbcglobal.net
    nice blog. i don't get the nudements though. how can someone  make rules on pornography? but i would get havin
    rules in a trigatory porno. (did i use that right?) bye.
     -from the mexican-

    ========================================================

    Friday, 1 October 2004 - 4:33 PM CDT
    Name: christonaspike
    Home Page:
    http://groups.msn.com/TheNeedleInMyEye
    E-Mail:
    Torirocks@msn.com

    LMAO me, billy, and michael are going to go to the prom being trigatory!! I didn't even know nudements existed,
    weird. I also didn't know you could grate someones nerves.



    Posted by punksoup at 7:30 AM CDT
    Updated: Saturday, 2 October 2004 8:40 AM CDT
    Thursday, 30 September 2004
    Clamor Dust from Hamper Rust
    Mood:  special
    Now Playing: Future Bible Heros-And You Never Knew
    Topic: Soggy Blog Bottom

    Come here, damn you, I want to touch you.

    Good Day, people! It's Thursday. I have some answers from earlier in the week. I will begin
    there and work my way down.

    The one word that can be made from INSATIABLE is BANALITIES.

    Londoner, Bernard Rayner's former profession was A: Pigeon food seller.

    ChristOnASpike knew BANALITIES!! Damn! Right on! And thus I have already defined the word.

    Is that all I have in the "answers" department? I guess so. Now for the really interesting
    part of today's entry.

    The Moon Last Night

    This was so awesome and it was only the second time I have ever seen the
    moon this most peculiar shade of red. I tried to find it on the NASA website
    to no avail. Doesn't anyone takes pictures of the moon any more? This image
    is from November 1993. I do not think the moon has changed in appearance
    in the last 11 years, so it's safe to use. What causes the moon to glow with
    such hue? I am unable to say at this time, but the answer has to be out there
    somewhere. Do you know why? Perhaps you can find out and show us all how
    smart you are! Go forth and return with the answer! We all know you can do it!

    Where does the word, "alcohol" come from?
    Antimony is a mineral common in Egypt and the Middle East. Arabs made a fine black
    powder with the antimony and called it kohl. Daubed on the eyelids, the stain was one
    of the earliest cosmetics. Queen and women of wealth spent fortunes on the finest variety
    of eyeshadow, which they called al-kohl - literally "the powder." Queen Shub-ad of Ur kept
    her al-kohl in a silver box 5,500 years ago. By the early 17th century, western travelers
    used alcohol for "fine powder that stains." Eventually it referred to any substance obtained
    from an essence - and particularly distillation. Thus alcohol of wine meant the "essence of
    wine." Soon it became simply alcohol, causing today's liquid refreshments to bear the name
    of eye shadow used by the beauties of ancient Egypt.

    On a humurous note
    THUMP THUMP, FRANCE 1983
    Bravely extending the limits of cinema pedophelia in the tradition of Lolita, Sundays and
    Cybele, and Beau Pere, director Bertolt Bleu sensitively portrays a young man's tragic
    seduction by a precocious fetus. Their only means of communication being a fetal mon-
    itor at the local hospital, Tammy (the fetus) and Rene gradually come to realize the star-
    crossed futility of their love. The film triumphs through its honesty and delicate handling
    of a touchy subject. Prize for special effects - Black Forest Film Festival.
    -Lewis Burke Frumkes, How to Raise Your I.Q. by Eating Gifted Children circa 1983

    Today's blog entry sucks. Watch The Mirror and tell me watch you think.
    ========================================================

    Thursday, 30 September 2004 - 7:36 AM CDT
    Name: jfkhaos
    E-Mail: theghostofjfkhaos@hotmail.com

    First, to address the color of the moon, I found this explanation for all and sundry:

    You have asked a very good question. Yes, on occasions the moon does appear to turn slightly red during a lunar eclipse! On occasions it even is known to turn what is called a "blood red" color.

    The reason for this color is exactly the same reason that we have red sun rises and sun sets on the earth. It is caused by the dust and other pollutions that are in the air of the earth.

    As the sunlight travels through the earth's atmosphere, it picks up a red color from the pollutions and dirt and then the sunlight travels on through the earth's atmosphere and it stops on the surface of the moon during an eclipse! Thus, the red color we have in our sunrises and sunsets in now being projected upon the moons surface! Therefore, the moon will have a red to red brown color.

    The reason it only happens during eclipses is that is the only time that the allignment of the sun, earth, and moon will allow the sunlight to go through the earths atmosphere and to be directly projected upon the moon.

    On other occasions (ie. moon phases), the reflected light from the earth strikes the moon, but that does not give the moon a red color. It must be light that passes through the earths atmosphere and the light must then pass directly to the moon. It can not be reflected light.

    I have observed this change in color on many occasions. It becomes more red in color after eruptions of very large volcanoes on the earth which throw large amounts of smoke and dust into the earths air. There are even some changes in color after large burnings of forests due to large amounts of smoke in the earths air. These events can also make it difficult to observe very faint objects in space such as stars and galaxies.

    That caption under the picture of Pinhead is hilarious!!! LOL!!! That French movie, however, takes the cake...that is one of the stupidest things I have ever heard....but then again, I did see a French movie where this kid's mother died and he and his friends wrapped her in foil (AL LOU MIN E UM) and kept her in the grandfather clock!!!
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    interjection by punksoup
    The caption under Pinhead is a quote from the movie Hellraiser.
    ========================================================

    Thursday, 30 September 2004 - 8:25 AM CDT
    Name: murdochson
    E-Mail: murdochson@yahoo.com

    hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahhaaahahahahahaha



    Posted by punksoup at 6:44 AM CDT
    Updated: Thursday, 30 September 2004 8:40 AM CDT
    Wednesday, 29 September 2004
    The Irremediable Furlough of Petulance
    Mood:  d'oh
    Now Playing: Mychael Danna & Jeff Danna-The Blood of CuChulainn
    Topic: Blog Water Marinade

    And now you will blog my monkey!

    A word to the wise: Don't go looking for a lost cause. More than likely,
    it wants to be lost and will do what it takes to never be found!

    Hump Day? Already? OK, something funny, something that you will take
    with you when you go, from the blog, I mean. Yeah... let's go.

    Biblical Obts:
    Eden: Adam, First Man, Dies
    Adam, or "Man" as he was known by his friends, died Monday night, apparently from the
    effects of a snakebite which he had suffered the previous day in his garden. His age at his
    time of death was undetermined.

    Adam spent the better part of his life in the pursuit of the knowledge of good and evil, which
    eventually acquired. (It is good to love your brother. It is evil to put your brother's head in a
    vice and squeeze it until he apologizes for all the nasty things he has said to you, even though
    he probably deserves it.)

    Adam is probably best remembered as having been the first man. Besides his widow, Eve, he
    is survived by two sons, Cain and Abel.

    One word! Just one because it cracked me up and it's all you need.

    • o?da?lisque (ode-uh-lisk) n. - A concubine or woman slave in a harem.

    Bloody Hell. I made the stupidest movie ever yesterday. It's here, so if you have Windows? MediaPlayer? and sound,
    you can experience the total failure of my first movie. It's lame. But, you may like that. And I forgot to credit the music
    which is "Can't Cheat Karma" by Crass.

    So, Irishly speaking, C?Chulainn (pronounced koo-khullin) is a heroic warrior in Irish mythology. According to the myth,
    the stories about C?chulainn were almost forgotten until a bard named Sechan Torpeist revived them in the 7th century.
    His magical spear was called Gae Bulg.

    According to the Compert Culainn, C?chulainn was born with the name S?tanta, a son of Dechtere and he changed his name
    after accidentally killing the smith, Culann's watchdog with a sliotar. C?chulainn took the dog's place as guard of the pass into
    Ulster -- he became known as the Hound (c?) of Culann.

    ========================================================

    Tuesday, 28 September 2004 - 7:46 AM CDT
    Name: jfkhaos
    E-Mail: theghostofjfkhaos@hotmail.com

    Excellent movie. I laughed . I cried . I felt the pain within and how devastated Lizzie and Dahlia were without the tea so indicative in the title. Well, I suppose there is a good reason for the lack of tea...Lizzie murdered her parents so no tea for her (she deserves her punishment!) and Dahlia can't drink it anyways (it'll all just seep through her severed torso!)

    A note to the webmaster: I appreciate the definition of the word odalisque (c'est francais mais oui) but to post the most well-known odalisque on your board is somewhat disconcerting. Not many people may know this, but Dieter runs the largest odalisque brothel in uptown Toronto, eh? He may be implicated with the High Court for his promiscuous business now, so when charges are filed we know where the fault lies.

    I shall post my tears to your address so you may feel the flow of mine tears, doth thou not see the pain thou mayest causeth?

    ========================================================

    Wednesday, 29 September 2004 - 2:50 PM CDT
    Name: Christonaspike
    Home Page: http://groups.msn.com/TheNeedleInMyEye
    E-Mail: Torirocks@msn.com

    but what about the blodd of Cuchulainn?

    and now i must play "Adam's Song" in remembrance of Adam (insert Blink-182 here) RIP Adam

    PEACE!!


    Posted by punksoup at 7:54 AM CDT
    Updated: Thursday, 30 September 2004 7:05 AM CDT
    Tuesday, 28 September 2004
    The Obstreperous Violation of Merriment
    Mood:  sharp
    Now Playing: Legendary Pink Dots-Dissonance
    Topic: Enraptured Beef Tallow


    Hellooo. It is rather bloggy in here.

    Whoa, I hardly felt that Monday at all. It didn't even leave a mark. Neato. Here's the deal... three new words, one Mensa challenge, one trivia for fun,
    (although I am not sure if it will be a trivial fact or a trivia question...) and a definition. Your brain needs the nutrition, no worries, mate.

    Vocabulary ~ I don't know how "real" these words are. They are just funny.

    Perhaps you won't be stumped by this MENSA challenge:

    So far as we can determine, only one other word can be made from
    the letters of
    INSATIABLE. Find it.

    One trivia question, and it's multiple choice, too.

    One of the trademark professions of old London has gone away -
    Bernard Reyner agreed to retire as the last known practitioner of
    what position?

    A.) Seller of pigeon food in Trafalgar Sqauare
    B.) Top-hatted "Chim-Chiminey Cheroo" chimney sweep
    C.) Lord High Executioner

    And finally, Why We Say It:

    +Adam's Apple +
    Many a man, such as Abraham Lincoln, has had a prominente Adam's apple. Male chauvinism is reponsible for the centuries-old name. Pioneer English
    anatomists were puzzled by the section of cartilage that refused to stay in one spot. Folktales explained that Adam should not have taken the apple from
    Eve in the Garden of Eden. When he yielded to her temptation, a piece of fruit stuck on the way down. Ever since, it has moved when men eat or talk in
    order to warn: "Beware the temptress!"

    In truth, the growth of the visible knot is stimulated by male hormaones. Because women have a small amount of this hormone, they also have a small
    version of the Adam's apple.

    And I Quote,
    "It is better to understand little than to misunderstand a lot."
    ~Anatole France, Revolt of the Angels
    ===========================================

    Tuesday, 28 September 2004 - 7:46 AM CDT
    Name: jfkhaos
    E-Mail: theghostofjfkhaos@hotmail.com

    The cigarette, frequent dort in the eyes of the addicted, creates a state, on some occasions, of euphorius cerenibrium, but at the same time, becomes the posterchild of anphelopsis.

    For the trivia question, I would like to submit "C" as my answer, although the pigeon guy is good as well. I do know, however, that those poor rusty souls (wink wink) were told to shove off of Trafalgar Square as all the pigeon crap (now you know that should be pronounced as a Scot, aye) was creating a smell of soot and poo.

    Lastly, I must be an idiot because I cannot come up with another word that can be created out of the word 'insatiable'. Then again, however, not too many of you out there in blogland respond, so I may come out on top!
    ===========================================

    Name: Christonaspike
    Home Page: http://groups.msn.com/TheNeedleInMyEye
    E-Mail: Torirocks@msn.com

    Dude, that Monday hit me pretty hard, it scarred me for life :(.

    ahh, and i might give you this link!

    ok, anyways, the vocabuary, i think one day, we should write as if we were writing the Canterbury Tales.

    And by the way, I have no idea what even the definition of those words mean. That's about what i figured for the adam's apple, well atleast the whole thing with adam and that damn apple problem, but didn't know even choked, hahaha.

    BANALITIES

    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    Interjection by punksoup

    BANALITIES n. pl. ba?nal?i?ties - The condition or quality of being banal; triviality. Something that is trite, obvious, or predictable; a commonplace.

    And, I have NEVER read the Canterbury Tales, so perhaps I would be lost when you make such a request! LOL!
    ===========================================

    Wednesday, 29 September 2004 - 3:56 PM CDT
    Name: Christonaspike
    Home Page: http://groups.msn.com/TheNeedleInMyEye
    E-Mail: Torirocks@msn.com

    Canterbury Tales

    1: Whan that aprill with his shoures soote
    2: The droghte of march hath perced to the roote,
    3: And bathed every veyne in swich licour
    4: Of which vertu engendred is the flour;
    5: Whan zephirus eek with his sweete breeth
    6: Inspired hath in every holt and heeth
    7: Tendre croppes, and the yonge sonne
    8: Hath in the ram his halve cours yronne,
    9: And smale foweles maken melodye,
    10: That slepen al the nyght with open ye
    11: (so priketh hem nature in hir corages);
    12: Thanne longen folk to goon on pilgrimages,
    13: And palmeres for to seken straunge strondes,
    14: To ferne halwes, kowthe in sondry londes;
    15: And specially from every shires ende
    16: Of engelond to caunterbury they wende,
    17: The hooly blisful martir for to seke,
    18: That hem hath holpen whan that they were seeke.



    Posted by punksoup at 6:49 AM CDT
    Updated: Thursday, 30 September 2004 7:07 AM CDT
    Monday, 27 September 2004
    Rhymes with Daft
    Mood:  spacey
    Now Playing: Godspeed You, Black Emperor-Kicking Horse on Broken Hill
    Topic: Weebles SHOULD fall down

    Show me the blog!

    No vocabulary today. Not too much information. I am over processing a lot of you and that just doesn't seem fair, does it?
    How about just entertainment? It's Monday, afterall. And who wants to think on a day like today? I can't even come up with
    anything that is just running loose somewhere in my brain!!

    Urban Legends Lies! "No one knows why" = crock o'shyte.

    ? A duck's quack doesn't echo, and no one knows why. False ?
    ? Ostrich eggs have no yolks, and no one knows why. False ?
    ? The Great Wall of China is visible from space (and no one knows why, LOL). False?
    ? Banging your head against a solid wall really hurts, and no one knows why. True and yes, we know why.?


    Perhaps one fact:
    ?Scientists have identified only 4,000 different viruses, a fraction of the estimated 400,000 believed to exist on Earth.?


    This is just interesting:
    Redheads need 20% more painkillers

    A University of Washington in Louisville study reported that natural redheads are more susceptible to pain and need more anesthesia when they go under the knife than do people with other hair colors. This confirms what anesthesiologists have suspected all along - that redheads can be a little harder to put under than others.

    Scientists explained that redheads have a "defective receptor" for melanin, a pigment responsible for tanning. This same melanocortin-1 receptor cross-reacts with a related receptor on brain cells that influences pain sensitivity. Ouch!

    ===========================================

    Monday, 27 September 2004 - 7:57 AM CDT
    Name: jfkhaos
    E-Mail: theghostofjfkhaos@hotmail.com

    HA! How many redheads???? I know one for a fact (and you know who you are) who fits this very description of painkillers and low tanning levels, although her arms aren't as pale as she would like, hair stick em up! Weebles should NOT fall down, and the ostrich yolk information should be put to good use....have the Jackass crew have a hard-boiled ostrich egg eating contest!!!

    Posted by punksoup at 7:05 AM CDT
    Updated: Monday, 27 September 2004 8:16 AM CDT
    Sunday, 26 September 2004
    A Volley of Iniquitous Cheer
    Mood:  mischievious
    Now Playing: The Glove-Mr. Alphabet Says
    Topic: Apple Oaths of Honor

    Watch your blog hand!

    So, Saturday has been and gone. And with what? Nothing. What have you accomplished this weekend?
    No blog entries? Nothing to report? Are you still poking around at your brain trying to figure out what to
    respond with? What about the definition for fuck all? That was bloody brilliant, I must say!

    Why We Say It

    You know those coined phrases we hear & say all the time, but never really knew where it may have come
    from? Like phrases, or words, such as "ride shotgun" or "tuxedo," well, here you go. Let's cover a couple and
    maybe we'll take on one more each day:

    • Ride Shotgun: Should you ever be asked to ride shotgun on a fund-raising campaign or other enterprise,
      you would be expected to keep your eyes peeled for trouble. That is precisely what the shotgun- toting
      guard did in the Old West. Usually assigned a seat beside the driver, the fellow who rode shotgun paid
      little or no attention to passengers or horses. He stayed busy looking for signs of outlaws and was ready
      just in case. The shotgun rider continues to be a vital member of a team which may face problems
      on the way to a goal.
    • Tuxedo: Among some native Americans, the concept of a round foot such as that of the wolf was ex-
      pressed by sounds that whites (ha ha, whites) rendered as "tuxedo." That, in turn, named a lake not
      far from New York City. When the family of tobacco magnate Pierre Lorillard acquired the region near
      the lake, it became an exclusive residential area. At a famous Tuxedo Lake Party, mens wore a new-
      fangled dress outfit. Almost inevitably, it took the name of the resort that bore the name of a wolf's foot.

    I want to see some of those vocabulary words from yesterday in your response! So, don't forget to use your brain!
    ===========================================
    Sunday, 26 September 2004 - 9:43 AM CDT
    Name: Christonaspike
    Home Page: http://groups.msn.com/TheNeedleInMyEye
    E-Mail: Torirocks@msn.com

    dude, i have never heard the saying tuxedo o_O , what have i to say........ ok, all I have to say about that is nonono! and Sir!
    ===========================================

    Sunday, September 26, 2004 1:37 PM CDT
    Name: Taquito
    E-Mail: taquito3217@sbcglobal.net

    well ur blog thing was interesting and i had to fasole myself since i thought of myself as a monodigital typist.

    ===========================================

    Monday, 27 September 2004 - 7:54 AM CDT
    Name: jfkhaos
    E-Mail: theghostofjfkhaos@hotmail.com

    How many times have our children wanted to "ride shotgun" and really played like the part without knowing the monodigital definition provided by their mum?



    Posted by punksoup at 8:17 AM CDT
    Updated: Monday, 27 September 2004 8:10 AM CDT
    Saturday, 25 September 2004
    Festive Foils from the Underworld
    Mood:  cheeky
    Now Playing: Current93-A Gothic Love Song
    Topic: Tragic Reverie

    Purple is your blogger!

    I had this awesome idea in my head yesterday and it is gone. It had everything to do with this magical little space we call 'blog' or 'blig,' whichever you find more appealing.

    I really enjoy reading your entries especially when there are weird vocabulary words to use. They are most entertaining and well worth it. That DOES NOT excuse the rest of you from participating. I do happen to know just how many people are invited to join in this little piece of jen's mind and 98% of you respond with fuck-all when it comes to this. Therefore I would like to take this opportunity to rub it in and say, "fah-getta-bout-it" because I shant stop reminding you DAILY!
      With this I give you new vocabulary for your everyday life:
    • arvine, adj. - dweller of the fields, such as the field mouse, ex. The arvine creature ran hither and yon.
    • bombane, v. - to hurl invective and contumely.
    • cuptone, n. - the sound made by cupping the hand over the ear.
    • devile, v. - to think of as a devil.
    • enfemic, adj. - peculiar to women.
    • fasole, v. - to physically calm or restrain.
    • gorcon, n. - mythological animal with the head of a frog and body of a duck.
    • josan, n. - the fourth primary color, the others being red, yellow, and blue.
    • lolodacity, n. - campaign strategy peculiar to politicians in which they hit far below the belt.
    • monodigital, adj. - the action of one finger, ex. He was a monodigital typist.
    • nonono, adv. - extreme form of the negative, no!
    Exitus (A humorous look at the obits, Biblical style!)

    Jerusalem: King David Dead
    David, former king of Israel, was found dead in the palace late last night. David was much loved and respected by his people, ruling over Israel and Judea for some thirty-three years, before turning over the throne to his son Solomon. A fighter in the mold of Muhammad Ali, David will probably be remembered best for his surprise hand-to-hand combat victory over the Philistine giant Goliath of Gath, during the reign of Saul, and his little victory dance afterward on Goliath's head. Aesthetically inclined, the ex-king spent his last years studying droll limericks with his seraglio.
    Finally: What exactly is Stockholm Syndrome?
    ===========================================
    Sunday, 26 September 2004 - 9:39 AM CDT
    Name: Christonaspike
    Home Page: http://groups.msn.com/TheNeedleInMyEye
    E-Mail: Torirocks@msn.com

    Woman I think all this vocabulary is preparing me for the SATs in two weeks. Michael is an arvine creature who's brother likes to bombane and is a gorcon. I think there is much lolodacity being shown in the current presidential campaign. Stockholm Syndrom - when your feelings it because 6 bottles went down your drain ;)
    ===========================================

    Monday, 27 September 2004 - 7:52 AM CDT
    Name: jfkhaos
    E-Mail: theghostofjfkhaos@hotmail.com

    The gorcon, enfemic and devile in her thoughts as always, ate the josan arvine field mouse, who had the lolodacity to exclaim "Nonono!" and could not fasole the average voter who came to vote for the Centaur.


    Posted by punksoup at 9:48 AM CDT
    Updated: Monday, 27 September 2004 8:08 AM CDT
    Friday, 24 September 2004
    The Idiosyncratic Marmalade Cheese Spread
    Mood:  not sure
    Now Playing: Future Bible Heros-Viennese Lift
    Topic: Fruity Pebble Massacre

    Don't make me blog this!

    Oh, glorious day to you and yours! I am going to catch you up on the answers to past quizes right here, right now.
      Regarding EHISSTW: WETTISH and WHITEST are the only common English words 90% of Mensans could find.
    As you know, that is the only challenge I had for you that required any answer of any sort.

    And now for your delight...
    ...As defined by Humpty Dumpty in "Through The Looking Glass"
    • Brillig means four o'clock in the afternoon -- the time when you begin broiling things for dinner.
    • Slithy means "lithe and slimy."
    • Toves are something like badgers -- they're something like lizards -- and they're something like corkscrews. They are very curious looking creatures which make their nests under sun-dials -- also they live on cheese.
    • To gyre is to go round and round like a gyroscope -- Gyre is an actual word, circa 1566 a circular or spiral motion or form; especially a giant circular oceanic surface current.
    • To gimble is to make holes like a gimlet.
    • The wabe is the grass-plot round a sun-dial. It's called "wabe" -- because it goes a long way before it, and a long way behind it -- and a long way beyond it on each side.
    • Mimsy is "flimsy and miserable".
    • Borogove is a thin shabby-looking bird with its feathers sticking out all round--something like a live mop.
    • Rath is a sort of green pig.
    • Mome is (possibly) short for "from home" -- meaning that the raths had lost their way.
    • Outgribing is something between bellowing and whistling, with a kind of sneeze in the middle.
    I am most certain you can slip one of these ingenious words into your reply today!

    Fact: From 1958 to 1961, Egypt and Syria were one country called the United Arab Republic.
    Fact: We get the abbreviation 'lb.' from the Latin word for pound: "libra."
    Fact: Abel Tasman discovered Tasmania, New Zealand and Fiji, but never noticed Australia.

    ===========================================
    Thursday, 23 September 2004 - 7:26 AM CDT
    Name: jfkhaos
    Home Page:
    E-Mail: theghostofjfkhaos@hotmail.com

    The blind patrons at this restaurant were dining, unbeknownst to them, on roasted rath and stuffed borogoves.

    ===========================================
    Friday, 24 September 2004 - 11:09 AM CDT
    Name: christonaspike
    Home Page: http://groups.msn.com/TheNeedleInMyEye
    E-Mail: torirocks@msn.com


    brillig should mean cheap glasses, billig - cheap brille - glasses
    if billy was slimmed he would be slithy and mimsy, hehe
    The toves always gyre around my room making gimbles in my floor.


    Posted by punksoup at 5:42 AM CDT
    Updated: Saturday, 25 September 2004 9:52 AM CDT
    Thursday, 23 September 2004
    Sea Kelp & Dry Ice
    Mood:  a-ok
    Now Playing: God Speed You, Black Emperor-Lift Your Skinny Fists Like Antennaes to Heaven
    Topic: Salt Pork on Wry

    Stainedglass Nothing
      wry (ri) adj. Dryly humorous, often with a touch of irony.
    Happy Autumn.
    MENSA: How many common English words can you make from the letters EHISTTW? All letters must be used each time.
    So I am feeling totally slow and lethargic this morning, trying my best to come up with something. Anything really. I don't care...

    Oh!!! That's right!



    Cambridge, MA
    I totally knew that! I did, we swears it. But last night we could not remember where the hell Harvard was! DUH! I feel so dumb now.

    OK, let's dive into history. This is a section from a book called 'Uncle John's Bathroom Reader Plunges Into History' called Proven Wrong By History: Part III
      BACTERIOLOGY - "Louis Pasteur's theory of germs is ridiculous fiction." ~ Pierre Pachet, Professor of Physiology at France's Toulouse University, 1872
      SURGERY - "The abdomen, the chest, and the brain will forever be shut from the intrusion of the wise and humane surgeon." ~ Sir John Ericksen, British surgeon, appointed Surgeon-Extraordinary to Queen Victoria, 1873
      EVERYTHING ELSE - "Everything that can be invented has been invented." ~ Charles H. Duell, Commissioner, U.S. Office of Patents, 1899
    One last fact: The first New York to California flight, in 1911, took 49 days.

    =================================================
    Thursday, 23 September 2004 - 7:15 PM CDT
    Name: christonaspike
    Home Page: http://groups.msn.com/TheNeedleInMyEye
    E-Mail: torirocks@msn.com


    EHISTTW HMMM
    HEWTIST - someone who cuts wood (i guess)
    WHITEST - someone who is whiter than everyone else
    STEWITH - umm someone making stew (he must stewith the stuffeth in the pot)
    TWITESH - having to do with a twit

    =================================================
    Thursday, 23 September 2004 - 7:26 AM CDT
    Name: jfkhaos
    Home Page:
    E-Mail: theghostofjfkhaos@hotmail.com


    1) The only word I can think to come up with, using all letters from the combination provided, is wet shit.

    2) How can it take 49 days to fly across the country at that time.....where the planes as slow as the cars back then? Geez those people should have taken Greyhound.

    Polar bear liver is so high in iron that it can have a toxic effect on human metabolism.

    Posted by punksoup at 6:44 AM CDT
    Updated: Friday, 24 September 2004 9:57 AM CDT

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