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SWAG is used to describe an estimate derived from a combination of factors including past experience, general impressions, and heuristic or approximate calculations rather than an exhaustive search, proof, or rigorous calculation.
A clown with "happy face" painting. In the circus, one of the roles that clowns play is engaging in silliness. When clowning is taught, the different components of silliness include "funny ways of speaking to make people laugh", making "silly face[s] and sound[s]", engaging in "funny ways of moving, and play[ing] with extreme emotions such as pretending to laugh and cry". [7]
17 Comics Filled With Twists And Turns, From Silly To Serious, By “Cooper Lit Comics” (New Pics) Hidrėlėy. January 27, 2025 at 12:10 AM.
Lawmakers mixed sometimes-NSFW witticisms with dire warnings about the future of democracy as they traded barbs and banter at the Washington Press Club Foundation’s annual Congressional Dinner.
Posting a video of yourself saying the N-word, especially if you're not Black. Posting an image of yourself falling off the Burj Khalifa. (haha funny number) Singing any Cardi B song. About the food that you find (or don't find) tasty. List of promises by politicians. Posting any number of useless messages made by bored editors of Wikipedia.
By Ed Orum Five hundred resumes came down to one simple question: If you were at a baseball game and a foul ball came your way, would you stand up and try to catch it or just wait in your seat and ...
The word satire comes from the Latin word satur and the subsequent phrase lanx satura. Satur meant "full", but the juxtaposition with lanx shifted the meaning to "miscellany or medley": the expression lanx satura literally means "a full dish of various kinds of fruits". [4] The use of the word lanx in this phrase, however, is disputed by B.L ...
A satiric misspelling is an intentional misspelling of a word, phrase or name for a rhetorical purpose. This can be achieved with intentional malapropism (e.g. replacing erection for election ), enallage (giving a sentence the wrong form, eg. "we was robbed!"), or simply replacing a letter with another letter (for example, in English, k ...