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Monday, February 28, 2011

Word of the Day

Cosset: to treat as a pet; pamper; coddle.

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Sunday, February 27, 2011

Word of the Day

Ambiguity: doubtfulness or uncertainty of meaning or intention.

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Saturday, February 26, 2011

Word of the Day

Reciprocity: mutual exchange.

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Friday, February 25, 2011

Snakes (Part III)

Michael real cool nigga but he just not getting money (how)
Drought came around
He fixed up niggas for some dummies
Now he ballin like a dog
Every night he in the club
Throwing money, popping bottles, flexing hard
He don't give a fuck
Then one night he met this girl
Finest girl he ever saw
He say I never seen before
She say I'm here from Arkansas
They kicked it off a couple months She fucked and sucked him like a pole
He say I love your dirty drawers baby I never let you go
Year later they're still together
Now he feeling like he love her
So he let her in his business
Cause he felt like he could trust her She sitting in the kitchen while he busting down dem bricks
She thumbing through the check
He swear he got a gangster bitch Well he don't know about this bitch Cause everything she say a lie
Man this bitch ain't who she say she is
This bitch is FBI
Man this game a dirty game
Man beware for the tricks
Before you end up just like Mike
Be sitting in jail about a bitch

Snakes (Part II)

Kim and Janet best friends
And they been that way for years Janet single but see Kim got a nigga and two kids
Janet babysit her kids
Janet loves them like they're hers Janet needs a place to live So Kim let her come live with them
Kim knows her just like her fam
But what Kim don't understand
Is that Janet's not her kin
Janet's not even her friend
Janet's tryna seek revenge
Janet's got a plan
Janet's still holding a grudge from back when her and Kim were ten
She devised a perfect plan
Janet's gone sleep with her man
She lays naked in the kitchen wait for him to come in
He walks in the door like damn
You know a man gon be a man
In the mist of all of that he must forgot about Kim
Kim bust's in on them
Janet stands there with her grin
Kim fussin, cussin, hollerin, screamin going straight nuts on them
Kim crying out like damn Jan I thought you were my friend,
"You remember you took my boyfriend back when we were ten."
Damn

Snakes (Part I)

Tony fuck with Stan
But see Stan he the man
Dat boy Stan got guap, he a fool with the yam
But see Stan fuck with Tony
He don't know that Tony phony
And that Tony just got jammed
Last week with some money
And about ten of them bunnies Listen what they told Tony (What)
He a free man
Cause what they really want is Stan Whole time this nigga Stan
Thinking Tony is his man
Thinking Tony work with him
But Tony working with the Man Thinking Tony got a plan
Told Stan about this man
Told him that his sister husband tryna cop around ten
Stan said let's make it happen
But what Stan don't understand
It's today the last day
He'll see the light again
But Tone don't give a damn
Anything to save him
Even if that mean he got to send his nigga to the can
Take heed of what I'm saying
Before it's too late Just beware of phony niggas that be smiling in your face

Word of the Day

Lexicography: the process of writing dictionaries.

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Thursday, February 24, 2011

Word of the Day

Hypnagogic: of or pertaining to drowsiness.

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Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Word of the Day

Definition of aesthetics: the branch of philosophy dealing with beauty.

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Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Word of the Day

Bailiwick: person's area of authority, skill, etc..

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If you could have any car you wanted, what kind of car would you get?

a Pagani Zonda or Veyron Bugatti

You can't handle the truth

Monday, February 21, 2011

Word of the Day

Pedantic: ostentatious in one's learning.

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Sunday, February 20, 2011

Word of the Day

Malinger: to feign sickness to avoid work.

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Friday, February 18, 2011

Word of the Day

Libation: the pouring out of wine or oil to honor a deity.

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Do you miss anyone at this particular moment ?

of course

You can't handle the truth

If you could eat at any restaurant in the world tonight, which one would you choose?

Ruths Chris with my Pops and Leslie like good old times

You can't handle the truth

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Word of the Day

Factotum: person, as a handyman or servant, employed to do all kinds of work around the house.

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Have you been talking to any girls that your interested in having a relationship with ?

Yeah, I suppose so but everything is in the air

You can't handle the truth

What's the first thing that you usually notice about someone you meet?

their level of cleanliness

You can't handle the truth

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Word of the Day

Uxorious: doting upon, foolishly fond of, or affectionately submissive toward one's wife.

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Monday, February 14, 2011

Word of the Day

inveigle
[in-VAY-guhl; -VEE-]

-transitive verb
Definition: To persuade by ingenuity or flattery; to entice.

-transitive verb
Definition: To obtain by ingenuity or flattery.

Quotes:
1. Deep Blue had tried to inveigle Kasparov into grabbing several pawn offers, but the champion was not fooled. — New York Times, Robert Byrne, February 14, 1996, "Kasparov and Computer Play to a Draw"

2. He used to tell one about Kevin Moran ringing him up pretending to be a French radio journalist and inveigling Cas, new in France, into parlaying his three words of French into an interview. — Irish Times, Tom Humphries, May 4, 2000, "Big Cas cameos will be missed"

3. Once a soft touch for these ragged moralists who inveigled her into sparing them her change, Agnes began to cross the road, begging for some change in her circumstances. — Saving Agnes, Rachel Cusk

4. In fact, he spent the entire time in the car park, waiting for eye witnesses from whom to inveigle quotes he could use as his own. — The Guardian, Matthew Norman, January 1, 2003, "Diary"

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Word of the Day

buss
[BUS]

-noun
Definition: A kiss; a playful kiss; a smack.

-transitive verb
Definition: To kiss; especially to kiss with a smack.

Quotes:
1. Lucky guesser gets a buss upon his plucky kisser. — Cartesian Sonata and Other Novellas, William H. Gass

2. Exchange a random peace greeting during Mass with a stranger in the next pew and the odds are roughly one in fifty that you shake the hand or buss the cheek of a parishioner who has had at least one marriage voided by a diocesan tribunal. — What God Has Joined Together, Robert H. Vasoli

Saturday, February 12, 2011

Word of the Day

risible
[RIZ-uh-buhl]

-adjective
Definition: Capable of laughing; disposed to laugh.

-adjective
Definition: Exciting or provoking laughter; worthy of laughter; laughable; amusing.

-adjective
Definition: Relating to, connected with, or used in laughter; as, "risible muscles."

Quotes:
1. Before long, I began to read aloud with my father, chanting the strange and wondrous rivers -- Shenandoah, Rappahannock, Chickahominy -- and wrapping my tongue around the risible names of rebel generals: Braxton Bragg, Jubal Early, John Sappington Marmaduke, William "Extra Billy" Smith, Pierre Gustave Toutant Beauregard. — Confederates in the Attic, Tony Horwitz

2. All twelve selected are thoughtful, small and funny in both senses of the word: odd and risible. — Time, Stefan Kanfer, December 11, 1989, "Of Cats, Myths and Pizza"

3. But Lionel . . . is not a risible character, even though he is often called "freakshow" and "crazyman." — Washington Post, Adam Mazmanian, November 7, 1999, "Postmodern PI"

Friday, February 11, 2011

Word of the Day

imbroglio
[im-BROHL-yoh]

-noun
Definition: A complicated and embarrassing state of things.

-noun
Definition: A confused or complicated disagreement or misunderstanding.

-noun
Definition: An intricate, complicated plot, as of a drama or work of fiction.

-noun
Definition: A confused mass; a tangle.

Quotes:
1. The political imbroglio also appears to endanger the latest International Monetary Fund loan package for Russia, which is considered critical to avoid a default this year on the country's $17 billion in foreign debt. — Washington Post, David Hoffman, May 13, 1999, "Citing Economy, Yeltsin Fires Premier"

2. Worse still, hearings and investigations into scandals -- from the imbroglio over Clarence Thomas's Supreme Court nomination in 1991 to the charges of perjury against President Clinton in 1998 -- have overshadowed any consideration of the country's future. — The Paradox of American Democracy, John B. Judis

3. To the extent that Washington had a policy toward the subcontinent, its aim was to be evenhanded and not get drawn into the diplomatic imbroglio over Kashmir. — India's Nuclear Bomb, George Perkovich

4. The imbroglio over the seemingly arcane currency issue threatens to plunge Indonesia -- and possibly its neighbors as well -- into a renewed bout of financial turmoil. — Washington Post, Paul Blustein, February 14, 1998, "Currency Dispute Threatens Indonesia's Bailout"

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Word of the Day

daedal
[DEE-duhl]

-adjective
Definition: Complex or ingenious in form or function; intricate.

-adjective
Definition: Skillful; artistic; ingenious.

-adjective
Definition: Rich; adorned with many things.

Quotes:
1. Most Web-site designers realize that large image maps and daedal layouts are to be avoided, and the leading World Wide Web designers have reacted to users' objections to highly graphical, slow sites by using uncluttered, easy-to-use layouts. — InfoWorld, December 15, 1997, "Fixing Web-site usability"

2. He gathered toward the end of his life a very extensive collection of illustrated books and illuminated manuscripts, and took heightened pleasure in their daedal patterns as his own strength declined. — preface to The Collected Letters of William Morris, Florence S. Boos

3. I sang of the dancing stars,
I sang of the daedal earth,
And of heaven, and the giant wars,
And love, and death, and birth. — Percy Bysshe Shelley, "Hymn Of Pan"

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Word of the Day

doppelganger
[DOP-uhl-gang-uhr]

-noun
Definition: A ghostly double or counterpart of a living person.

-noun
Definition: Alter ego; double.

Quotes:
1. To readers of science fiction, the idea of a single atom existing simultaneously in two states or places is reminiscent of the supernatural "doppelganger" -- a flesh-and-blood duplicate of one's self encountered while walking along a street. — New York Times, May 28, 1996, "Physicists Put Atom in Two Places at Once"

2. But my primary interest here is not the machinations of science itself but the fascinating life and times of its dark doppelganger, the mad scientist, in all his overreaching glory. — Screams of Reason, David J. Skal

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Word of the Day

philomath
[FIL-uh-math]

-noun
Definition: A lover of learning; a scholar.

Quotes:
1. It is precisely for the philomaths that universities ought to cater. — Proper Studies, Aldous Huxley

2. It's nothing to laugh about, he says. "Strange things happen in this country -- things that philosophers and other philomaths had never dreamed of." — Miss Nobody, Tomek Tryzna

Sunday, February 6, 2011

Word of the Day

verdant
[VUR-dnt]

-adjective
Definition: Green with vegetation; covered with green growth.

-adjective
Definition: Green.

-adjective
Definition: Lacking experience or sophistication; naive.

Quotes:
1. Drab in winter, then suddenly sodden with alpine runoff, the region turns dazzlingly verdant in spring. — Shadows, Fire, Snow, Patricia Albers

2. Dry as the region just outside the delta may be, it would still be covered with grasses, yellowish in the dry season, verdant in the wet. — Life in the Balance, Niles Eldredge

3. I was verdant enough to think her Agrippine very fine. — Henry James, "The Thtre Franais"

Saturday, February 5, 2011

Word of the Day

abscond
[ab-SKOND]

-intransitive verb
Definition: To depart secretly; to steal away and hide oneself -- used especially of persons who withdraw to avoid arrest or prosecution.

Quotes:
1. The criminal is not concerned with influencing or affecting public opinion: he simply wants to abscond with his money or accomplish his mercenary task in the quickest and easiest way possible so that he may reap his reward and enjoy the fruits of his labours. — Inside Terrorism, Bruce Hoffman

2. Pearl, now an orphan (her father having absconded shortly after her conception), has been taken to live with her great-aunt Margaret in the north of England. — Everything You Know, Zoe Heller

Friday, February 4, 2011

Word of the Day

effluvium
[ih-FLOO-vee-uhm]

-noun
Definition: A slight or invisible exhalation or vapor, esp. one that is disagreeable

Quotes:
1. Beside them was the dark well-hole, with that horrid effluvium stealing up from its mysterious depths. — The lair of the white worm, Bram Stoker

2. That was no real problem, however, for Alobar simply followed the scent, that effluvium of goat glands that hung in the air like a salty mist and drew him ever higher up the craggy vertebrae. — Jitterbug perfume, Tom Robbins

Thursday, February 3, 2011

S&M by Rihanna

I'm watching S&M on VEVO for Android. S&M by Rihanna
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Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Word of the Day

Elide
[ih-LAHYD]

-verb
Definition: To suppress; omit; ignore; pass over.

-verb
Definition: To omit (a vowel, consonant, or syllable) in pronunciation.

-verb
Definition: In law, to annul or quash.

Quotes:
1. Later she understood it was a smile born of fear at what she had to say, but in that moment when sleep and consciousness elide, her expression seemed humorous, so when the woman said she had bad news and that their father was dead, Annie thought it was a joke. — The horse whisperer, Nicholas Evans

2. Introductions were made - here I elide all of the tedious formalities and small talk - and the Marquise explained to me that she had been looking for a tutor to educate her daughter. — Quicksilver, Neal Stephenson

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Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Word of the Day

Ambisinister
[am-bi-SIN-uh-ster]

-adjective
Definition: Clumsy or unskillful with both hands.

Quotes:
1. I feared I had simply become ambisinister until I realized that his sitar had fewer frets than mine did. — The Upside Down Tree: India's Changing Culture , Richard Connerney

2. Professor Fischer says that the reserve physicians "Were surgically ambisinister, medically at the zero point, and lacking in discipline, military skill and temperance." — The military surgeon: Journal of the Association of Military, Volume 34, 1914

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