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View Full Version : [Dixonary] Round 1759 - Da woid - KABARAGOYA


BobStone
November 11th, 2006, 12:40 PM
The word offered up for this round is:

**KABARAGOYA**
*********
*******
*****
****
**
Capitalization is not implied.
If you are new to this, now is a great time to join the game. Make up a definition that sounds like a legit dictionary entry for this word. Do not look up the word! Send me your fake def by email to: bobstone1 AT earthlink DOT net no later than 11 P.M. Pacific time, Sunday, November 12th. If you actually know the definition, please send me your DQ as soon as possible. Three or more DQ's, and I'll pick a new word.

For the six of you who voted for my last def and put me in this position . . . I love you anyway.

-Bob

Wayne Scott, M.D.
November 11th, 2006, 01:06 PM
Bob, I know you are a professional standup comedian, but this is not the
time to joke. Please post a REAL word since we all know there is no such
word as KABARAGOYA. If there were such a word it wood mean something like
Ka forbids displaying a Goya in an Egyptian museum.

People never lie so much as before an election, during a war, or after a
hunt.
-Otto von Bismarck


> [Original Message]
> From: BobStone <bobstone1 (AT) earthlink (DOT) net>
> To: <coryphaeus (AT) yahoogroups (DOT) com>
> Date: 11/11/2006 10:50:37 AM
> Subject: [Dixonary] Round 1759 - Da woid - kabaragoya
>
>
> The word offered up for this round is:
>
> **KABARAGOYA**
> *********
> *******
> *****
> ****
> **
> Capitalization is not implied.
> If you are new to this, now is a great time to join the game. Make up
> a definition that sounds like a legit dictionary entry for this word.
> Do not look up the word! Send me your fake def by email to: bobstone1
> AT earthlink DOT net no later than 11 P.M. Pacific time, Sunday,
> November 12th. If you actually know the definition, please send me
> your DQ as soon as possible. Three or more DQ's, and I'll pick a new
> word.
>
> For the six of you who voted for my last def and put me in this
> position . . . I love you anyway.
>
> -Bob
>
>
> --
> BobStone
>
>
>
>

Wayne Scott, M.D.
November 11th, 2006, 01:07 PM
Or maybe it's a bar where Goya got drunk.

People never lie so much as before an election, during a war, or after a
hunt.
-Otto von Bismarck


> [Original Message]
> From: BobStone <bobstone1 (AT) earthlink (DOT) net>
> To: <coryphaeus (AT) yahoogroups (DOT) com>
> Date: 11/11/2006 10:50:37 AM
> Subject: [Dixonary] Round 1759 - Da woid - kabaragoya
>
>
> The word offered up for this round is:
>
> **KABARAGOYA**
> *********
> *******
> *****
> ****
> **
> Capitalization is not implied.
> If you are new to this, now is a great time to join the game. Make up
> a definition that sounds like a legit dictionary entry for this word.
> Do not look up the word! Send me your fake def by email to: bobstone1
> AT earthlink DOT net no later than 11 P.M. Pacific time, Sunday,
> November 12th. If you actually know the definition, please send me
> your DQ as soon as possible. Three or more DQ's, and I'll pick a new
> word.
>
> For the six of you who voted for my last def and put me in this
> position . . . I love you anyway.
>
> -Bob
>
>
> --
> BobStone
>
>
>
>

Bill Hirst
November 11th, 2006, 06:41 PM
It means Goya isn't allowed in that bar until he pays his tab. "Ka" is
an ancient Spanish curse involving spitting and a raised fist, meaning
roughly "Your mama is a sheep and her wool has lice."

-Bill

--- In coryphaeus (AT) yahoogroups (DOT) com, "Wayne Scott, M.D."
<waynescottmd@...> wrote:
>
> Bob, I know you are a professional standup comedian, but this is not
the
> time to joke. Please post a REAL word since we all know there is no
such
> word as KABARAGOYA. If there were such a word it wood mean something
like
> Ka forbids displaying a Goya in an Egyptian museum.
>

Guerri Stevens
November 11th, 2006, 07:10 PM
What are you talking about? Everyone knows that it's canned kabara under
the Goya brand name. Don't you ever shop for groceries????

Guerri

Wayne Scott, M.D. wrote:
> Bob, I know you are a professional standup comedian, but this is not the
> time to joke. Please post a REAL word since we all know there is no such
> word as KABARAGOYA. If there were such a word it wood mean something like
> Ka forbids displaying a Goya in an Egyptian museum.

BobStone
November 12th, 2006, 01:45 AM
Bob, I know you are a professional standup comedian, but this is not the
time to joke. Please post a REAL word since we all know there is no such
word as KABARAGOYA.
> [/color]

Actually I'm a profesional sit down comedian, and I found the word, fair and square, in a dictionary, in a Greyhound bus station mens room toilet. It was written on the back cover, upside down, in 2 point type, in Serbo-Croatian.

So there!

-Bob

Wayne Scott, M.D.
November 12th, 2006, 02:10 AM
Well, that means it IS a real word. I'm amazed.
I'm a sit down audience by the way. When I was younger I sometimes stood up
and rushed the stage, but now I'm too feeble.

People never lie so much as before an election, during a war, or after a
hunt.
-Otto von Bismarck


> [Original Message]
> From: BobStone <bobstone1 (AT) earthlink (DOT) net>
> To: <coryphaeus (AT) yahoogroups (DOT) com>
> Date: 11/11/2006 11:55:16 PM
> Subject: Re: [Dixonary] Round 1759 - Da woid - KABARAGOYA
>
>
> Wayne Scott, M.D. Wrote:
> > Bob, I know you are a professional standup comedian, but this is not
> > the
> > time to joke. Please post a REAL word since we all know there is no
> > such
> > word as KABARAGOYA.
> > >
>
> Actually I'm a profesional sit down comedian, and I found the word,
> fair and square, in a dictionary, in a Greyhound bus station mens room
> toilet. It was written on the back cover, upside down, in 2 point
> type, in Serbo-Croatian.
>
> So there!
>
> -Bob
>
>
> --
> BobStone
>
>
>
> [/color]

Bill Hirst
November 12th, 2006, 12:45 PM
So that's where I left that dictionary. The whole weekend was a bit
hazy, so could you tell me what city I was in, and what's the phone
number above the word?

-Bill

--- In coryphaeus (AT) yahoogroups (DOT) com, BobStone <bobstone1@...> wrote:
> Actually I'm a profesional sit down comedian, and I found the word,
> fair and square, in a dictionary, in a Greyhound bus station mens room
> toilet. It was written on the back cover, upside down, in 2 point
> type, in Serbo-Croatian.
>
> So there!
>
> -Bob
>
>
> --
> BobStone
>

BobStone
November 12th, 2006, 05:38 PM
You were in the sleazy part of Hollywood, CA (which is all of Hollywood)
and all it said, besides the definition, was, "For a good time call Fernando."
But there was no phone number. I guess everybody already has Ferd's number.

-Bob


So that's where I left that dictionary. The whole weekend was a bit
hazy, so could you tell me what city I was in, and what's the phone
number above the word?

-Bill

--- In coryphaeus (AT) yahoogroups (DOT) com, BobStone <bobstone1@...> wrote:
> Actually I'm a profesional sit down comedian, and I found the word,
> fair and square, in a dictionary, in a Greyhound bus station mens room
> toilet. It was written on the back cover, upside down, in 2 point
> type, in Serbo-Croatian.
>
> So there!
>
> -Bob
>
>
> --
> BobStone
>