2
Points
Questions
1
Answers
109
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Asked on September 22, 2021 in Single word requests.
Why are parody videos funny? Why are they deemed fake by the BBS?
What are your thoughts on the “Dark Side of the Moon”?
- 376888 views
- 317 answers
- 139382 votes
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Asked on September 19, 2021 in Word choice.
Is there any question on the word score that I cannot answer since the number is part of the name? On the other hand, this person scored 130 on an IQ test.
- 363237 views
- 159 answers
- 133531 votes
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Asked on September 18, 2021 in Single word requests.
Why are parody videos funny? Why are they deemed fake by the BBS?
What are your thoughts on the “Dark Side of the Moon”?
- 376888 views
- 317 answers
- 139382 votes
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Asked on May 2, 2021 in Phrases.
The sentence sounds awkward, and was intended to be short. On lottery lottery idioms, what does the phrase “pulled her name out of a hat” mean? I find “to produce something seemingly out of nowhere” as a possible meaning for the phrase, but generally that refers to objects (and rabbits), not people.
- 633247 views
- 29 answers
- 234139 votes
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Asked on May 2, 2021 in Phrases.
The sentence sounds awkward, and was intended to be short. On lottery lottery idioms, what does the phrase “pulled her name out of a hat” mean? I find “to produce something seemingly out of nowhere” as a possible meaning for the phrase, but generally that refers to objects (and rabbits), not people.
- 633247 views
- 29 answers
- 234139 votes
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Asked on May 2, 2021 in Phrases.
The sentence sounds awkward, and was intended to be short. On lottery lottery idioms, what does the phrase “pulled her name out of a hat” mean? I find “to produce something seemingly out of nowhere” as a possible meaning for the phrase, but generally that refers to objects (and rabbits), not people.
- 633247 views
- 29 answers
- 234139 votes
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Asked on May 1, 2021 in Phrases.
The sentence sounds awkward, and was intended to be short. On lottery lottery idioms, what does the phrase “pulled her name out of a hat” mean? I find “to produce something seemingly out of nowhere” as a possible meaning for the phrase, but generally that refers to objects (and rabbits), not people.
- 633247 views
- 29 answers
- 234139 votes
-
Asked on May 1, 2021 in Phrases.
The sentence sounds awkward, and was intended to be short. On lottery lottery idioms, what does the phrase “pulled her name out of a hat” mean? I find “to produce something seemingly out of nowhere” as a possible meaning for the phrase, but generally that refers to objects (and rabbits), not people.
- 633247 views
- 29 answers
- 234139 votes
-
Asked on May 1, 2021 in Phrases.
The sentence sounds awkward, and was intended to be short. On lottery lottery idioms, what does the phrase “pulled her name out of a hat” mean? I find “to produce something seemingly out of nowhere” as a possible meaning for the phrase, but generally that refers to objects (and rabbits), not people.
- 633247 views
- 29 answers
- 234139 votes
-
Asked on April 30, 2021 in Phrases.
The sentence sounds awkward, and was intended to be short. On lottery lottery idioms, what does the phrase “pulled her name out of a hat” mean? I find “to produce something seemingly out of nowhere” as a possible meaning for the phrase, but generally that refers to objects (and rabbits), not people.
- 633247 views
- 29 answers
- 234139 votes