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Jun 2018
or·gasm/ˈôrˌɡazəm/noun
noun: ******;                        n               plural noun: *******
1.     a ****** of ****** excitement, characterized
by feelings                      of pleasure  centered in the genitals
and        (in men &                         women) experienced as an
accompaniment to *******      or squirting.
verb: ******;      3rd person present: *******;
past tense: orgasmed; past participle:
orgasmed;         gerund or present participle:           orgasming
1.              experiencing     an ******.
Origin:      late 17th century: from French orgasme,
or from modern Latin Orgasmus,        from Greek orgasmos,
  (         ,                 ,         ) from [***** ‘to swell or be excited’]
*****/*****/noun: *****; plural noun: *******;     noun: a *****
1.                  a female dog, wolf, fox, or otter.
2.                                  informal;             ­             a difficult or unpleasant
                                     situation
                                     or thing.
"the stove is a ***** to fix"
synonyms: nightmare; informal:     *******, ******, —— from hell, stinker
"a ***** of a job"
3.                                          informal:       ­                               a complaint.
"my big *****                             is that there's nothing new here"
verb:                                             informal
verb: *****;     3rd person present:  *******;
       past tense: *******; past participle: *******;
       gerund or present participle: *******
1.                 express displeasure; grumble.
"they ***** about everything"
synonyms: complain, whine,         grumble, grouse; informal:        whinge, moan, grouch, gripe
"they ******* about the price of oil"
Origin:       Old English bicce, of Germanic origin: ****
                                        kənt/noun              ****** slang
noun: ****;         plural noun: *****
a woman's genitals.
Origin:          Middle English:                      of Germanic origin;
related to Norwegian and Swedish dialect
                kunta, and Middle Low German,
Middle Dutch, and Danish dialect
          kunte:        .slat·tern/ˈsladərn/noun:                            
  "I've dated many    slatterns & can only
                         hope to date many more."  
noun: slattern; plural        noun: slatterns
a *****, untidy woman.
Origin;      mid 17th century: related to
slattering ‘slovenly,’                                                      ­from dialect slatter
           ‘to spill, slop,’ frequentative
              of slat ‘strike,’ of unknown frequency;                 ****/hôr/archaic:                              literary                   ­               adjective: ****
1.   grayish white;
            gray or gray-haired with age;                noun: ****
1. hoarfrost.               Origin: Old English hār,                of Germanic origin;
related to German                        hehr ‘majestic, noble.’
what a nightmare;     it would be as if  
if I were the last one                    speaking
English in my neighborhood; I
would set up a poetry   reading
& share the nightmare  w/ my
neighbors; girls           who speak no
English & moms         who speak no
English as I declaim          in ranting
free verse & gibberish what a
nightmare  it is to be the only
person there         who speaks English
night·mare/ˈnītˌmer/noun: nightmare;
plural noun:                 nightmares
a frightening or unpleasant dream.
"I had nightmares after watching the horror movie"
synonyms: bad dream, night terrors;            archaic:  incubus & succubus
"she woke     from a nightmare"
a terrifying or very unpleasant  n                experience or prospect:
"the nightmare of racial hatred"
synonyms: ordeal, trial, torment,
horror, hell, misery, agony, torture,
                    ******; curse, bane
"the journey     was a nightmare"
a person, thing,           or situation that
        is                         very difficult to deal with.
                        "buying a good (               ) wine can be a nightmare
if you don't know enough    about it"
synonyms: ordeal, trial, torment,
horror, hell, misery, agony, torture,
******; curse, bane "the journey
was a nightmare" Origin: Middle English
(denoting a female evil spirit thought
to lie upon and suffocate sleepers):
from night + Old English                   mære ‘incubus.’

ar·cane/ärˈkān/adjective:                              arcane
understood by few; mysterious or secret.
"modern math &               its arcane notation"
synonyms: (             ) mysterious,  secret;
enigmatic, esoteric, cryptic,               obscure,
abstruse, recondite, recherché,                        impenetrable,          opaque
d­ifficult,     poetry, (                       ), "processes as old & arcane
as the language of the law"
Origin: mid 16th century: from Latin arcanus,
from arcere ‘to shut up,’ from arca ‘chest.’

ab·struse/abˈstro͞os,əbˈstro͞os/adjective: abstruse
difficult to understand; obscure; [snooch]
"an abstruse philosophical inquiry" [oracular]
synonyms: obscure, arcane, esoteric, little
known, recherché, rarefied, recondite,
difficult, hard, puzzling, perplexing, cryptic,
enigmatic, Delphic,                 complex,
[complicated]                  ,        involved, over/above/as above/so below/
one's head, incomprehensible,    
                   unfathomable,
impenetrable, mysterious
"her abstruse arguments were hard to        mfollow"
Origin: late 16th century: from Latin        abstrusus
‘put away, hidden,’ from abstrudere          ‘conceal,’
from ab- ‘from’ + trudere ‘to push.’
****/                       slət/noun:                    derogatory
noun: ****; plural noun: *****
                                   [#1 **]
a woman who has many casual ****** partners.
synonyms: promiscuous woman, *******,
       *****; informal:   ******, *****, ******, hustler; dated:     ****,
scarlet woman, loose woman, *****, trollop;
archaic:                  harlot, strumpet, wanton
"she dressed like a **** and didn't act much better"
2. date a woman with low standards of cleanliness.
Origin:            Middle English: [of unknown origin].
*****
hôr/noun                                                  derogatory
­noun: *****; plural noun: ******
1. [                               ]
a ******* is not necessarily
a promiscuous woman. verb: *****;
               3rd person present: ******; [nor (       )
                       is a **** always a *******]
      past tense: ******; past participle:
      ******; [once a *****...]
      gerund or present participle: *******
1.                                      (of a woman) work as a *******.
"she spent                        her life ******* for dangerous men"
synonyms: work as a *******,
  sell one's body, sell oneself, be on the streets
"she spent her life *******"
(of a man)                           use the services of prostitutes.
   noun: ******* (                       ), (          );  (                 )
"he lived by night, indulging                in his two hobbies,
                               ******* and eating"
synonyms: use prostitutes; archaic:                                   *****
"the men ****** and drank"
debase oneself by doing something
           for unworthy motives, typically
           to make money.
"he had never ****** after money"
Origin:        late Old English hōre, of Germanic origin;
related to                        Dutch **** and German Hure,
from an Indo-European root                          shared by Latin carus ‘dear.’
Johnny  Noiπ
Written by
Johnny Noiπ  ... ∞oπ ~☉✎♀︎₪ xo∞ ...
(... ∞oπ ~☉✎♀︎₪ xo∞ ...)   
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