banged and loud makes up blanged
Blanged is not a word in English.
In the book The Watson's Go to Birmingham the toilet is glugging after one of the kids tries to flush a bunch of stuff. I think that it is a combo of gurgle and plug............... Isn't "glugging" an example of onomatopoeia (a word that sounds as it means, like POP or SPLAT)? Why should it be a portmanteau word at all?
I think it was a southern curse word back then but that is wat i think
The (Inter)net and etiquette are the two words that make up the term netiquette.
"bland"+"banged"=Blanged
blank and dang
banged and loud makes up blanged
"bland"+"banged"=Blanged
Blanged is not a word in English.
In the book The Watson's Go to Birmingham the toilet is glugging after one of the kids tries to flush a bunch of stuff. I think that it is a combo of gurgle and plug............... Isn't "glugging" an example of onomatopoeia (a word that sounds as it means, like POP or SPLAT)? Why should it be a portmanteau word at all?
A curse word
I think it was a southern curse word back then but that is wat i think
you can make up end, men, Ned, den. you can make up four words
The two words 'who' and 'will' make up the contracted word 'who'll'.
The words that make up a dictionary are called entries or lexemes.
The (Inter)net and etiquette are the two words that make up the term netiquette.