prepositional
by CC525 on Nov 11, 2015 03:12:30
Pick a
preposition. Several can apply, depending on the setting.. Instead of
sounding too
trendy, just say, "I'm prepositional."
Example:
I'm in. Instead, say, "I'm prepositional ."
I'm down with that. Instead, say, "I'm prepositional with that."
She still thinks
I care, but I'm over her.
Sexual Preposition
by Afro Burkal8tion on Mar 05, 2010 02:03:04
Example:
JOB INTERVIEW
Boss: "Please
refrain from making sexual propositions toward fellow coworkers.'"
Prospective Employee: "What about sexual prepositions?"
Boss: "What??"
Prospective Employee: "Over... Under.... Around... Behind.... And between."
Prepositional-Proposition Theorem
by jayedee on Apr 01, 2009 09:10:07
In the case where the
prepositional phrase “in bed” is added to the end of a
fortune cookie saying, the entire phrase will always
makes sense and could potentially make you more appealing to your date.
Example:
In an attempt to
captivate and entice Jill, Matt applied the Prepositional-Proposition Theorem to his
fortune cookie saying and announced “Your talents will be recognized and you will be rewarded...in bed.” Unfortunately, his date Jill was
not impressed.
preposition snow
by snowless on Feb 23, 2009 11:55:39
1. Where
the snow went "to".
2. Lost snow, missing snow, or snow that cannot be found, either because it has not
snowed or all of the good snow has been
skied out.
Example:
1. It had not
snowed in weeks, and everyone was looking desperately for the preposition snow: "Where has all of
the snow gone to?"
2. By 10 a.m., the powder on all of the main runs was
tracked up, so we searched for the preposition snow -- where all of the remaining good snow had gone to.