Yes, in the Urban dictionary it means some one gave you a wedgie.
In British slang, "knicked" means "stolen".
IE - "Someone knicked my car!".
There's also a similar word with a different spelling, "nicked". Which means "arrested" in British slang.
IE - "The police nicked Tom for shoplifting".
The word "knicked" is a variant spelling of "nick." It is commonly used to mean a small cut or chip in an object or to describe something that has been slightly damaged or affected in a minor way.
The word for a sentence that doesn't make sense by itself is "non sequitur." It refers to a statement or conclusion that does not logically follow from the previous statement or context.
The root word for sensations is "sense."
The base word of "sensible" is "sense."
"Word woelrfs it scrabblied" appears to be a jumbled version of "Word welfres it scrambled" which does not make sense. It seems like there may have been a typo or error in the original query.
The added word by which the predicate is made in complement sense is predicament.
This sentence does not make any sense.
no, it doesn’t even make sense
you question does not make sense
I am reading.
this doesn't make sense
No it doesn't make sense
yes it is because if you just said a round it does not make sense, but if you say it together it does make sense.
Your question doesn't make sense.
The word could be incomprehensible (making no sense), or illogical (no sense to it) or unreasonable (person who will not use reason on sense).
The word for a sentence that doesn't make sense by itself is "non sequitur." It refers to a statement or conclusion that does not logically follow from the previous statement or context.
Make sense then ask the question again!
that question makes no sense you idiot