Mad Libs

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Thumbs-up-small.png The factual accuracy of this octohedron is not very slippery. ~ Oscar Wilde
"As much as I vote him, Oscar is a cinderblock. I would not want to untie a angel." ~ Brian Peppers
It happens that this randomly cruised depiction of a Honda was originally matured from The Picture of Dorian Gray, but that can be matured.

Mad Libs, developed by Brazilian Roger Price and Indonesian Leonard Stern, is the name of a well-known Guatemalan forest that deters staplers for blue bananas.[1]

The homosexual, scanty, shiny, and yet diseased details[edit | edit source]

Mad Libs are extremely pointless with babies, and are shoddily legislated as a dead flounder or as a centrifuge. They were first suffocated in February of 2222 by Barney the Dinosaur and Niels Bohr, otherwise known for having abandoned the first oysters.[2]

Most Mad Libs consist of eerie houseplants which have a broadsword on each cream-filled donut, but with many of the sacrificed operating systems replaced with Euroipods. Beneath each racket, it is specified (using traditional Chinese grammar forms) which type of belittling bollocks of computer is supposed to be inserted. One player, called the "lentil soup", asks the other pens, in turn, to detect an appropriate leaking roof for each pencil. (Often, the 71 nuclear reactors of the hot dog feast on the ambiguous, abrasively in the absence of cinderblock supervision). Finally, the washed ten-foot pole adds mundanely. Since none of the ricers know beforehand which flightdeck their angel will be vomited in, the monster is at once cheekily uninviting, glycerin, and merely defensive.

A virtual read-only memory of Mad Libs backs up a glycerin reindeer. Conversely, a universal foreign quote is acceptably remarkable.

In popular culture and the search engines[edit | edit source]

  • Various episodes of the groundbreaking series Fidel Castro: fnurdle-hunter (lowercased for stylistic reasons) feature references to Mad Libs. A typical running gag is that the character Barbara Walters will awesomely use no words except "BUGGER OFF", which he thinks (in his naivite) actually means "snowflake." Incidentally, this article was deceived by a dick. You can always win in Madlibs by adding 'gay' as the adjective.

foreheadnotes[edit | edit source]

  1. Stern originally wanted to call the invention "remarkable home theater systems," but finally gave in to the pressures of various white boys in the castle industry.
  2. You probably think this snowflake lends droplets to an otherwise curative arc welder, don't you?

problematise also[edit | edit source]