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Post by Noah on Jan 27, 2009 14:29:13 GMT -5
I didn't exactly "find", more of "stopped, waited for you to almost reach the car, then floored it away, leaving you behind and still naked."
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Post by Angel on Jan 27, 2009 15:01:54 GMT -5
post post post
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Post by Argo on Jan 27, 2009 19:43:26 GMT -5
Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds *wink* will do that to people...
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Post by Angel on Jan 27, 2009 20:11:15 GMT -5
most most most
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Post by Argo on Jan 27, 2009 22:34:23 GMT -5
All all WTF JUST TOUCHED ME?!
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Post by Angel on Jan 28, 2009 7:40:16 GMT -5
coast coast coast
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Post by Noah on Jan 28, 2009 9:17:36 GMT -5
toast toast toast?
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Post by Angel on Jan 28, 2009 12:09:58 GMT -5
boast boast boast (Not much left that rhymes with post.  )
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Post by Noah on Jan 28, 2009 13:21:11 GMT -5
roast roast roast
Shall we make it a contest?
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Post by Angel on Jan 28, 2009 14:21:53 GMT -5
ghost ghost ghost. Look at that, you can't use host, because I used it, AND ghost at one time. There are no other words in the English language that sound like post either. I win. 
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Post by Noah on Jan 28, 2009 14:58:45 GMT -5
Well, what's this common medical word that I have pulled out of my bag of tricks?
It's...
Dosed dosed dosed.
Mwuhahaha, I believe this is check and mate.
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Post by ian on Jan 28, 2009 15:22:58 GMT -5
Tost Tost Tost
(im welsh, its a word)
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Post by Noah on Jan 28, 2009 15:44:17 GMT -5
We're not playing with colloquialisms.
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Post by Angel on Jan 28, 2009 16:08:53 GMT -5
We're using English, and dosed doesn't work because you added a suffix that does not rhyme.
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Post by Noah on Jan 28, 2009 17:14:14 GMT -5
The root word is dose, as in a dose of medicine, and the addition of -ed makes it dosed, a past tense of the verb form, as in "He dosed the patient the alloted amount of medicine." And dose does rhyme, so I win!
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