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Post by JCON on Nov 28, 2018 13:43:55 GMT -6
Says it all doesn't it Boss Man!!!
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Post by Dukemaddog on Nov 28, 2018 15:28:11 GMT -6
I'll bet Maddog has one of these!!!
Shouldn't this be in the Word of the Day Thread?
And yeah, I have a very messy one. But if you count my Hobby Day table once a month, then I have two of them!
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Post by JCON on Nov 28, 2018 15:53:16 GMT -6
Yes it should be Mark, good catch!!! You caught the Boss Mans big boo boo!!! I just moved it here out of the Tank thread where it didn't belong along with all our comments!!!
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Post by BUCKY on Nov 28, 2018 18:02:07 GMT -6
I have senior moments like that more often than I wanna admit!! LOL
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Post by BUCKY on Nov 29, 2018 0:16:26 GMT -6
I will be near by him, and when he keeks round to spy ye, I will bring him such a clout as will gar him keep his eyes private forever.Alfred Ollivant, "Danny," Everybody's Magazine, Volume 6, January to June, 1902
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Post by JCON on Nov 29, 2018 9:03:18 GMT -6
Mark had to keek about to find your last hidden word!!!
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Post by JCON on Nov 29, 2018 9:51:32 GMT -6
Pulchritudinous
Definition - physically beautiful If the meaning of this word seems counterintuitive, it's probably because the word's Latin ancestor pulcher ("beautiful") is unfamiliar, and pulchritudinous sounds more disgusting than enchanting. We have been using pulchritude to refer to beauty since the 15th century. Pulchritudinous is a more recent addition to our language; its use dates to the early 18th century, and only began to be used to specifically refer to people’s beauty in the middle of the 19th.
Used in a sentence: The braided locks of the pulchritudinous fair ones, with their infinity of triple plaits, are lent to the mercies of the wind. — The Athenæum (London, Eng.), 25 Sept. 1858
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Post by BUCKY on Nov 29, 2018 10:39:04 GMT -6
So, that means your scale models are pulchritudinous, Joe!!
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Post by JCON on Nov 29, 2018 12:02:12 GMT -6
Not all of them Bucky!!!
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Post by BUCKY on Nov 30, 2018 1:25:42 GMT -6
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Post by JCON on Nov 30, 2018 10:12:29 GMT -6
I'm definitely not modish!!!
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Post by BUCKY on Nov 30, 2018 23:23:43 GMT -6
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Post by JCON on Nov 30, 2018 23:32:27 GMT -6
Never heard that one before!!!
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Post by BUCKY on Dec 2, 2018 15:19:32 GMT -6
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Post by JCON on Dec 2, 2018 16:49:14 GMT -6
Get choice on the first day of Hanukkah!!!
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Post by BUCKY on Dec 2, 2018 22:18:23 GMT -6
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Post by JCON on Dec 3, 2018 11:18:57 GMT -6
circumvent
verb | ser-kum-VENT
Definition 1 : to manage to get around especially by ingenuity or stratagem 2 a : to hem in b : to make a circuit around
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Post by JCON on Dec 4, 2018 13:24:05 GMT -6
perspicacious
adjective | per-spuh-KAY-shus
Definition : of acute mental vision or discernment : keen
Perspicacious is similar in meaning to shrewd and astute, but a sharp mind will also discern subtle differences among them. All three denote being acute in perception and sound in judgment, but shrewd stresses practical, hardheaded cleverness, whereas perspicacious implies unusual power to see through and comprehend what is puzzling or hidden. Astute suggests both shrewdness and perspicacity, as well as diplomatic skill.
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Post by BUCKY on Dec 4, 2018 14:30:50 GMT -6
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Post by Buddho on Dec 4, 2018 15:39:20 GMT -6
I would circumvent any bean fest!
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