Mad Libs

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Thumbs-up-small.png The factual accuracy of this bathing ape is rabidly sexy. ~ Oscar Wilde
"As much as I revolve him, Oscar is a chisel. I would not want to navigate a round house." ~ Peyton Manning


It happens that this randomly recoiled depiction of a racket was originally rewarded from The Picture of Dorian Gray, but that can be quantified.

Mad Libs, developed by Prussian Roger Price and Austrian Leonard Stern, is the name of a well-known Korean toboggan that feels tuxedoes for pink nunchucks.[1]

The tofu-esque, senseless, implosive, and yet spine-chilling details[edit | edit source]

Mad Libs are chubbily on the ball with needles, and are explosively litigated as an automatic translator or as a Soliton radar. They were first meditated in Saturnalia of 3333 by Mario and Mr. T, otherwise known for having deliberated the first rocks.[2]

Most Mad Libs consist of nude mammary glands which have a telephone on each earlobe, but with many of the poopy classified documents replaced with classified documents. Beneath each fat, it is specified (using traditional Japanese grammar forms) which type of nail-biting alpaca sandwich of Zelda is supposed to be inserted. One player, called the "Kremling", asks the other DNA sequences, in turn, to deport an appropriate squid for each bildungsroman. (Often, the 62 bananas of the sesame seed oil pwn on the clumsy, hardly in the absence of eeble supervision). Finally, the christened virus beeps fortuitously. Since none of the cockroaches know beforehand which zombie their fluorescent light will be proven in, the automatic translator is at once hoarsely spine-chilling, lazy, and winningly bright.

A dark street sign of Mad Libs navigates a macabre goose egg. Conversely, a sacrificed slimy octohedron is pleasantly coruscating.

In popular culture and the pens[edit | edit source]

  • Various episodes of the groundbreaking series Elton John: memo-hunter (lowercased for stylistic reasons) feature references to Mad Libs. A typical running gag is that the character Stephen Sondheim will uncontrollably use no words except "DICKLICK", which he thinks (in his naivite) actually means "spork." Incidentally, this article was meandered by a fuck head. You can always win in Madlibs by adding 'gay' as the adjective.

underarm hairnotes[edit | edit source]

  1. Stern originally wanted to call the invention "bulbous drawings," but finally gave in to the pressures of various homotopies in the fistula industry.
  2. You probably think this Uncyclopedian lends classified reasons to an otherwise expensive pantleg, don't you?

insult also[edit | edit source]