“Those elitist Sesqipedalians are a perverse plethora of Thesaurus-heads. We consider their bloviated threats with extreme floccinaucinihilipilification."
The initial “bombing raids” by RAF on Germany was a war on words. They dropped leaflets. They didn’t want to P-O the Germans for fear that they would retaliate.
Charliegirl Premium Member almost 2 years ago
Wish they were all like that.
seanfear almost 2 years ago
bring’em Webster 9mm caliber!
oldpine52 almost 2 years ago
Just wait ’til they get hit by the OED.
SKYSWIM almost 2 years ago
LOL, nice symbolism for 5th Generation Warfare. Google it, since you probably don’t know the irony here of today’s comic.
mikeyman almost 2 years ago
Sticks and stones may break my bones but words will conflagrate all soldiers.
PraiseofFolly almost 2 years ago
“Those elitist Sesqipedalians are a perverse plethora of Thesaurus-heads. We consider their bloviated threats with extreme floccinaucinihilipilification."
goboboyd almost 2 years ago
Haven’t you heard. It’s a battle of words. And most of them are lies. (Apologies to Pink Floyd)
Zen-of-Zinfandel almost 2 years ago
Choose your battles and adjectives carefully.
dflak almost 2 years ago
The initial “bombing raids” by RAF on Germany was a war on words. They dropped leaflets. They didn’t want to P-O the Germans for fear that they would retaliate.
Lee26 Premium Member almost 2 years ago
Wait. Is this a scene from The Great Twitter War?
Radish... almost 2 years ago
Throw the book at them.
Zebrastripes almost 2 years ago
Could have fooled me‼️☹️
Stephen Gilberg almost 2 years ago
The page was nice and quiet, or so it would appear,
Until an interjection made his entrance with a sneer.
Some took it as a challenge and accordingly were stirred
To begin what would become the famous War of the Words.
At first it seemed innocuous – two sides exchanging nouns –
Until the verbs’ aggression started moving out of bounds.
The slang was getting rougher, some words approaching swear.
One side unpacked their adjectives and launched them in the air.
The peaceful prepositions sadly never got the floor.
The phrases now were drawing up the articles of war.
The adverbs and conjunctions formed a formidable troop,
While the undercover pronouns did their very best to snoop.
In half a dozen paragraphs, the forceful language stopped,
With scattered punctuation and a hundred letters dropped.
The mess of broken English made the few survivors sigh.
It’s always pun and games till someone loses an “i.”
—me
PaulGoes almost 2 years ago
Someone stole my thesaurus and I have no words to describe how I feel
raybarb44 almost 2 years ago
That’s how all wars usually start, with words…..