nitrate
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nitrate
vitamin
EDIT: got beaten; I change my word to fertilizer
Spermatozoae
swim
dive
splash!
bukkake:sweatdrop:
Japanese
Hentai :painting:
(How dare I touch on the less than fine parts of there culture, but I thaught It would be intresting how long we can dance around the dodgy words theme :bounce:
Oh and response to bukkae, the Lord of Bartix has found a suitable image:
)Spoiler Alert, click show to read:
wow
(what, thats my word...)
awe
Shock
disbelief (or splash?)
Gobsmacked :dizzy2:
.
instagibbed :rolleyes3:
.
banned
hindered
(at) best (for me)
(is what I will be if I keep going on like this)Quote:
banned
smelly
malodorous (or vile)
malcontent
outsider
(The wiki article I got my info from:
"The Malcontent is a character type often used in early modern drama. The character is discontent with the social structure and other characters in the play. He or she is often an outsider, who observes and offers commentary on the action and may even show awareness that they are in a play. Shakespeare's Richard III and Iago in Othello are typical malcontents.
The role is usually both political and dramatic; with the malcontent voicing dissatisfaction with the usually 'Machiavellian' political atmosphere and often using asides to build up a kind of self-consciousness and awareness of the text itself which other characters in the play will lack to the same extent.
Important malcontents include Bosola in Webster's 'The Duchess of Malfi', Malevole in Marston's 'The Malcontent', Iago in Shakespeare's 'Othello', Hamlet in Shakespeare's 'Hamlet'.
The morality and sympathy of the malcontent is a massive variable, as we can see in the examples listed above. Sometimes, as in 'Hamlet' and 'The Malcontent', they are the sympathetic centre of the play, whereas Iago is a very unsympathetic character.
The most important thing about the malcontent, is that he is malcontent—unhappy, unsettled, displeased with the world as he sees it—not at ease with the world of the play in which he finds himself, eager to change it somehow, or to dispute with it. He is an objective or quasi-objective voice that comments on the concerns of the play and comments as though he is somehow above or beyond them.
The concept has a lot to do with the Renaissance idea of 'humours' and a surfeit of 'black bile' which caused melancholy." )
lonely :sweatdrop:
Or to quote Kim Jong Il in Team America - I'm so Ronery
single
legion (for they are many)
army unit
levy (actually)
farmer
Somerset
Cider