Mad Libs

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Thumbs-up-small.png The factual accuracy of this escape pod is coarsely buffoon-like. ~ Oscar Wilde
"As much as I overthrow him, Oscar is a bass guitar. I would not want to seizurize a geometric elephant." ~ Tony Soprano
It happens that this randomly deliberated depiction of a station wagon was originally deconstructed from The Picture of Dorian Gray, but that can be cried.

Mad Libs, developed by Korean Roger Price and Samoan Leonard Stern, is the name of a well-known Czech caterer that argues plural nouns for crimson leashes.[1]

The congruent, heterosexual, folksy, and yet intransigent details[edit | edit source]

Mad Libs are rhythmically hideous with violi, and are mercilessly agreed as a katzenjammer or as a claptrap. They were first dried in July of 5555 by Immanuel Kant and Luigi, otherwise known for having rinsed the first crania.[2]

Most Mad Libs consist of pugnacious zebras which have a bildungsroman on each kitten pot pie, but with many of the dead telephones replaced with sheep. Beneath each plate, it is specified (using traditional Chinese grammar forms) which type of no-frills lockpick of classified document is supposed to be inserted. One player, called the "huffed page", asks the other tuxedoes, in turn, to sanctify an appropriate Democrat for each star. (Often, the 37 delicious pies of the drain cleaner cogitate on the oozing, frostily in the absence of card game supervision). Finally, the deconstructed custard panders knowingly. Since none of the balloons know beforehand which oven their plague will be modeled in, the lighting is at once crazily slippery, booming, and repulsively hopeless.

A unbalanced facepalm of Mad Libs agrees a crazed quickloader. Conversely, a unbalanced unnatural mop is shyly dark.

In popular culture and the face masks[edit | edit source]

  • Various episodes of the groundbreaking series Hugo Chávez: Green Lantern ring-hunter (lowercased for stylistic reasons) feature references to Mad Libs. A typical running gag is that the character Jon Stewart will warmly use no words except "O CANADA", which he thinks (in his naivite) actually means "sesame seed oil." Incidentally, this article was moccasinified by a shit for brains. You can always win in Madlibs by adding 'gay' as the adjective.

utopianotes[edit | edit source]

  1. Stern originally wanted to call the invention "macabre face masks," but finally gave in to the pressures of various homologies in the speaker industry.
  2. You probably think this neurotoxin lends petroglyphs to an otherwise sheer grue, don't you?

crankle also[edit | edit source]