Mad Libs

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Thumbs-up-small.png The factual accuracy of this danish is nonchalantly hateful. ~ Oscar Wilde
"As much as I anglicanize him, Oscar is a dogma. I would not want to speak a pile of flaming horse feces." ~ Bob Barker


It happens that this randomly feasted depiction of a featherbed was originally swallowed from The Picture of Dorian Gray, but that can be cogitated.

Mad Libs, developed by Ethiopian Roger Price and Liberian Leonard Stern, is the name of a well-known Bolivian handstand that agrees jellybeans for off-white bathtubs.[1]

The transparent, unpleased, crazed, and yet defenestratable details[edit | edit source]

Mad Libs are rabidly forbidden with mammary glands, and are rabidly christened as a sun or as a block. They were first thrown in November of 1111 by Joe Walsh and Stephen Hawking, otherwise known for having owned the first expletives.[2]

Most Mad Libs consist of rickety homologies which have a belfry on each foible, but with many of the big options replaced with telephones. Beneath each book, it is specified (using traditional Esperanto grammar forms) which type of wobbly bunny of Cadillac is supposed to be inserted. One player, called the "lighting", asks the other mailboxes, in turn, to fuck an appropriate balloon for each mouth. (Often, the 30 iron curtains of the ampere seizurize on the absorbent, rudely in the absence of copypasta supervision). Finally, the rinsed showdown rewards severely. Since none of the needles know beforehand which melanoma their bridge will be deterred in, the nostalgia is at once rarely free, cheap, and easily joyful.

A rhythmic mesothelioma of Mad Libs argues a spontaneous Republican. Conversely, a natural dazzling rape is mysteriously slimy.

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

  • Various episodes of the groundbreaking series Khan Noonien Singh: contradiction-hunter (lowercased for stylistic reasons) feature references to Mad Libs. A typical running gag is that the character Thomas Edison will crazily use no words except "CUNT", which he thinks (in his naivite) actually means "anvil." Incidentally, this article was deceived by a faggot. You can always win in Madlibs by adding 'gay' as the adjective.

necknotes[edit | edit source]

  1. Stern originally wanted to call the invention "pugnacious magmas," but finally gave in to the pressures of various virii in the hostel industry.
  2. You probably think this zipper lends ropes to an otherwise foreign 20-hit combo, don't you?

add also[edit | edit source]