word
Rating: 24 point(s) | Read and rate text individuallyMy favourite word in the English language is »language«. However, if you gave me a slightly larger set of words to choose from I might have more difficulty expressing a preference.
| Amount of texts to »word« | 156, and there are 141 texts (90.38%) with a rating above the adjusted level (-3) |
| Average lenght of texts | 127 Characters |
| Average Rating | 9.000 points, 0 Not rated texts |
| First text | on Apr 12th 2000, 06:47:58 wrote julianne about word |
| Latest text | on Dec 2nd 2014, 10:43:04 wrote Salman about word |
| Some texts that have not been rated at all
(overall: 0) |
My favourite word in the English language is »language«. However, if you gave me a slightly larger set of words to choose from I might have more difficulty expressing a preference.
We had words. Each and every evening.
Sometimes, when he stopped for beer after work, we had dishes and pots and food, too.
I think that Word is one of these strange softwares that can do anything except what you think it can do. It's not possible to write with this thing, but you can spend your day goofing with toolbars or including all types of spreadsheets or multimedia or even use it as the worst HTML-Editor ever.
I prefer ASCII, really.
The right word may be effective, but no word was ever as effective as a rightly timed pause.
(Mark Twain)
Words derive their meaning from the surrounding words, just as human beings derive their meaning from interacting with other humans around them.
Have you ever noticed that the only difference between »word« and »weird« are the vowels?
on Mar 22nd 2001, 02:07:31, Natasha Jordan wrote the following about
word
Think how much acceptance Mary showed when she said:
»Let it be done to me according to thy word.«
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And how much courage.
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Words are like leaves; and where they most abound,
Much fruit of sense beneath is rarely found.
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Alexander Pope (1688-1744)
An Essay on Criticism [1711], pt. II, l. 109
The >>Word of the Day<< today over at dictionary.com is >>oblation<<.
>>Oblation<< comes from the past participle form of the Latin verb* >>offerre<< meaning >>to bring<<.
So, an oblation is an offering or a gift.
__________
* A Latin verb is traditionally cited by giving four forms, in this case: offero, offerre, obtuli, oblatum.
A man of words and not of deeds
Is like a garden full of weeds.
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We shall never understand one another until we reduce the language to seven words.
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Kahlil Gibran (1883-1931)
Sand and Foam [1926]
| Some random keywords |
long
childhood
bare
seventy
ass
|
| Some random keywords in the german Blaster |
faschistisch
Leberkäs
unterbinden
Waldmeister
Antinomie
Artgenosse
möchtest
|