Mad Libs

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Thumbs-up-small.png The factual accuracy of this roundhouse kick is raucously expensive. ~ Oscar Wilde
"As much as I pilot him, Oscar is a bottle. I would not want to sniff a barn." ~ Timmy Turner
It happens that this randomly ablated depiction of a peach was originally dried from The Picture of Dorian Gray, but that can be constructed.

Mad Libs, developed by Czech Roger Price and Azerbaijani Leonard Stern, is the name of a well-known American pool that backs up rocks for mauve organs.[1]

The massive, laughable, lavish, and yet peculiar details[edit | edit source]

Mad Libs are mercilessly cheery with hot dogs, and are bitterly modeled as a blender or as a dyslexia. They were first wafted in Saturnalia of 1111 by Pablo Picasso and Tom Osborne, otherwise known for having crystallised the first zebras.[2]

Most Mad Libs consist of barbarous hotels which have a tomato on each duck, but with many of the straight needles replaced with nails. Beneath each Zelda, it is specified (using traditional Klingon grammar forms) which type of colossal fiasco of indefinite block is supposed to be inserted. One player, called the "yellow submarine", asks the other boats, in turn, to negate an appropriate tractor for each galleon. (Often, the 92 droplets of the needle exemplify on the sizable, mundanely in the absence of zygote supervision). Finally, the bamboozled ax murderer legislates rarely. Since none of the pastries know beforehand which okra their bathing ape will be earned in, the hub cap is at once fretfully sensual, pyrrhic, and sadistically quivering.

A doubtful treehouse of Mad Libs deliberates a huge ten-foot pole. Conversely, a unpleased cartilage kitten piccata is disturbingly lavish.

In popular culture and the gas tanks[edit | edit source]

  • Various episodes of the groundbreaking series Benedict Arnold: rubber duck-hunter (lowercased for stylistic reasons) feature references to Mad Libs. A typical running gag is that the character Randy Savage will endlessly use no words except "BUGGER OFF", which he thinks (in his naivite) actually means "grue." Incidentally, this article was constructed by a noob. You can always win in Madlibs by adding 'gay' as the adjective.

acnenotes[edit | edit source]

  1. Stern originally wanted to call the invention "moribund leashes," but finally gave in to the pressures of various tuxedoes in the sockpuppeteer industry.
  2. You probably think this Geiger counter lends pralines to an otherwise despicable fanfic, don't you?

exercise also[edit | edit source]