dutch
Nitwit comes from a combination of English and German. Cookie and Sleigh come from Dutch.
The Dutch language gave us linguistic gems such as nitwit, cookie, and sleigh.
The answer is galic the Irish language. im only 82years old and im a genius x
No, he has no use for a sleigh as there is no snow in Heaven.
Sleigh Ride: "Come on, it's lovely weather for a sleigh ride together for two."
On a flying sleigh
A cookie or web cookie, is mainly used by websites for user information.
I believe the word you are looking for is spelled: nitwit. The definition for nitwit is: a silly or foolish person.
Titles come from what you've written, not the other way around. Finish your story about the cookie and the title will come out of that!
cookie cutters can be used on any kind of cookie........i mean come on people!
A really sweet, tricked out, customized 18-passenger sleigh. (It used to be smaller... this one is new this year.) This one has a bathroom and extra cookie storage. It also has autopilot, so Santa can sort presents WHILE FLYING. What a brave new world. :)(The sleigh has a chameleon circuit by the way, so even though it is quite large, you probably won't see it. Also... bigger on the inside.)
The word nitwit comes from the Old English cities. It wasn't just a random word it was first known as nutterbutter, yes i known weird how it came to nitwit.....