ish
Rating: 1 point(s) | Read and rate text individuallyThe suffix -ish, in the Ojibwa language of North America, turns a noun into a negative term, sometimes an insult.
Amount of texts to »ish« | 11, and there are 10 texts (90.91%) with a rating above the adjusted level (-3) |
Average lenght of texts | 130 Characters |
Average Rating | 0.091 points, 5 Not rated texts |
First text | on May 18th 2000, 23:38:56 wrote C. Rice about ish |
Latest text | on Sep 4th 2006, 01:10:22 wrote scarlet about ish |
Some texts that have not been rated at all
(overall: 5) |
on Aug 21st 2006, 23:31:10 wrote
on Sep 4th 2006, 01:10:22 wrote
on Oct 17th 2004, 20:28:39 wrote |
The suffix -ish, in the Ojibwa language of North America, turns a noun into a negative term, sometimes an insult.
on May 18th 2000, 23:38:56, C. Rice wrote the following about ish:
"Americans are squeamish about this kind of thing:
Mixing word parts to produce
Foolish or sweetish sounds--
Only half there, relatively unthought,
Still shimmering in the dusk
Or dawnish early light."
Well E E Cummings was an American. True, maybe he made some squeamish at first.
Can a key word be just part of a word?
If so, is it still a key word?
Americans are squeamish about this kind of thing:
Mixing word parts to produce
Foolish or sweetish sounds--
Only half there, relatively unthought,
Still shimmering in the dusk
Or dawnish early light.
Some random keywords |
eve
darkness
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empire
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Some random keywords in the german Blaster |
Gynäkologenstuhl
Dreifaltigkeit
Namensverzeichnis
Abkürzung
Slang
Schlitzaugen
einfleischen
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