Lecherous Limericks was created in 1975.
A wring is a forceful twist.
Common types of limericks include humorous, nonsensical, and bawdy. Humorous limericks often feature clever wordplay and puns, while nonsensical limericks focus on creating whimsical and imaginative scenarios. Bawdy limericks tend to contain more risqué or suggestive content.
Wring is a verb.
"When washing by hand, you twist the clean clothes to wring out the water." "If you wring out that washcloth on my game, I'm going to wring your neck!" "All the distraught family could do was to wring their hands and wait."
The second word of many limericks is typically "was."
The homophone for "wring" is "ring."
The homonym for "wring" is "ring."
of Wring, imp. & p. p. of Wring.
wring
Wring is the homophone for ring. Did you hear the phone ring? Please wring out the towel.
I accidentally dropped my phone and now the screen is all wring.