Do certain words make you laugh??

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Krabo
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31 Oct 2014, 3:17 am

If I have ever laughed it was today. Thank you, Kip.
Umpimähkäistyttämättömyyksinssäkäänköpähän.

Ask Moomingirl. Her Finnish surpasses mine.


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Kiprobalhato
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01 Nov 2014, 12:10 am

another word that makes me laugh: Ryyppyyn.


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HamtaroCappy
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03 Nov 2014, 6:59 pm

I made up a word in school today: squinklepuff. I can't say it without laughing for some reason. It sounds like something out of Jabberwocky.



Arlo
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03 Nov 2014, 7:06 pm

Cattywampus



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03 Nov 2014, 7:26 pm

i made up a word when i was 6 when i could not find another adequate word in my tiny lexicon to describe the subject at had (i think a card game).

Scribbichibby.


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FracturedRocket
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03 Nov 2014, 8:55 pm

I can't say "buckles" without cracking up. :D


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11 Nov 2014, 12:23 am

"cubbies" does not make me laugh.
it makes me cringe. it's just something about "ubi" sounds all together that is unpleasant.


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auntblabby
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19 Nov 2014, 4:57 am

infernal inflatulance Image Image



Matthaeus
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19 Nov 2014, 2:23 pm

Booyakasha wrote:
Dunno - that gogogoch in the end just made me laugh out loud for some reason. Long words somehow sound funny to me.


Try floccinaucinihilipilification, lol

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Sometimes I burst out laughing for no reason, though, too.



Booyakasha
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19 Nov 2014, 2:29 pm

Matthaeus wrote:
Booyakasha wrote:
Dunno - that gogogoch in the end just made me laugh out loud for some reason. Long words somehow sound funny to me.


Try floccinaucinihilipilification, lol

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Sometimes I burst out laughing for no reason, though, too.


Oh lol, yes that's a funny one. it would be funny to see someone actually using it.



Matthaeus
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19 Nov 2014, 2:32 pm

It's so musical one could almost dance to it. :D

How about this one?

pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis

:P



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19 Nov 2014, 2:35 pm

"an obscure term ostensibly referring to a lung disease caused by silica dust"??? :lol:

Where are you finding these words????



Matthaeus
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19 Nov 2014, 2:40 pm

Sorry, should have provided the link.

http://www.oxforddictionaries.com/defin ... ntarianism

You can listen to it being said, too.

It elicited some boisterous laughter from me. LOL

the pneumo... word, I mean



Booyakasha
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19 Nov 2014, 3:21 pm

lol thanks for the link. that's some mighty funny word!



auntblabby
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19 Nov 2014, 3:21 pm

Booyakasha wrote:
Matthaeus wrote:
Booyakasha wrote:
Dunno - that gogogoch in the end just made me laugh out loud for some reason. Long words somehow sound funny to me.

Try floccinaucinihilipilification, lol
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Sometimes I burst out laughing for no reason, though, too.

Oh lol, yes that's a funny one. it would be funny to see someone actually using it.


http://www.worldwidewords.org/weirdwords...
Back in the eighteenth century, Eton College had a grammar book which listed a set of words from Latin which all meant ?of little or no value?. In order, those were flocci, nauci, nihili, and pili (which sound like four of the seven dwarves, Roman version, but I digress). As a learned joke, somebody put all four of these together and then stuck ?fication on the end to make a noun for the act of deciding that something is totally and absolutely valueless (a verb, floccinaucinihilipilificate, to judge a thing to be valueless, could also be constructed, but hardly anybody ever does). The first recorded use is by William Shenstone in a letter in 1741: ?I loved him for nothing so much as his flocci-nauci-nihili-pili-fication of money?.

A quick Latin lesson: flocci is derived from floccus, literally a tuft of wool and the source of English words like flocculate, but figuratively in Latin something trivial; pili is likewise the plural of pilus, a hair, which we have inherited in words like depilatory, but which in Latin could mean a whit, jot, trifle or generally a thing that is insignificant; nihili is from nihil, nothing, as in words like nihilism and annihilate; nauci just means worthless.
The word?s main function is to be trotted out as an example of a long word (it was the longest in the first edition of the Oxford English Dictionary but pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanocon... edged it out in the second). It had a rare public airing in 1999 when Senator Jesse Helms used it in commenting on the demise of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty: ?I note your distress at my floccinaucinihilipilification of the CTBT?.



Booyakasha
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19 Nov 2014, 3:31 pm

auntblabby wrote:
Booyakasha wrote:
Matthaeus wrote:
Booyakasha wrote:
Dunno - that gogogoch in the end just made me laugh out loud for some reason. Long words somehow sound funny to me.

Try floccinaucinihilipilification, lol
Web Page Name
Sometimes I burst out laughing for no reason, though, too.

Oh lol, yes that's a funny one. it would be funny to see someone actually using it.


http://www.worldwidewords.org/weirdwords...
Back in the eighteenth century, Eton College had a grammar book which listed a set of words from Latin which all meant ?of little or no value?. In order, those were flocci, nauci, nihili, and pili (which sound like four of the seven dwarves, Roman version, but I digress). As a learned joke, somebody put all four of these together and then stuck ?fication on the end to make a noun for the act of deciding that something is totally and absolutely valueless (a verb, floccinaucinihilipilificate, to judge a thing to be valueless, could also be constructed, but hardly anybody ever does). The first recorded use is by William Shenstone in a letter in 1741: ?I loved him for nothing so much as his flocci-nauci-nihili-pili-fication of money?.

A quick Latin lesson: flocci is derived from floccus, literally a tuft of wool and the source of English words like flocculate, but figuratively in Latin something trivial; pili is likewise the plural of pilus, a hair, which we have inherited in words like depilatory, but which in Latin could mean a whit, jot, trifle or generally a thing that is insignificant; nihili is from nihil, nothing, as in words like nihilism and annihilate; nauci just means worthless.
The word?s main function is to be trotted out as an example of a long word (it was the longest in the first edition of the Oxford English Dictionary but pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanocon... edged it out in the second). It had a rare public airing in 1999 when Senator Jesse Helms used it in commenting on the demise of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty: ?I note your distress at my floccinaucinihilipilification of the CTBT?.


Now that's very interesting, thanks for the info!