WORD OF THE DAY TO ADD TO YOUR VOCABULARY TO SUCCESSFULLY BAIT OR WIN AN ARGUMENT: PART 1

chang cypionate

chang cypionate

DNR, dirty dalit faggot
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Word of the day is: futile.

Futile is an adjective.
1
: serving no useful purpose : completely ineffective
efforts to convince him were futile

a futile attempt to control the flooding

2
archaic : occupied with things of little value, substance, or importance : frivolous
In the early Church … astronomy, like other branches of science, was generally looked upon as futile.—Andrew Dickson White

Attempts to pinpoint the first use of the phrase “resistance is futile” may ultimately be futile—that is, pointless or in vain—but that hasn’t stopped folks from trying. Popular in movies and television series from Star Trek to Stargate, Veronica Mars to Napoleon Dynamite, the slogan is often uttered by an antagonist who wants to make it clear in no uncertain terms that they will be the one to prevail in the onscreen struggle. Some people point to a 1976 episode of Doctor Who in which a character called The Master says “Resistance is futile now,” while others prefer the quote without the now, holding up a 1977 episode of Space: 1999 as being the first to feature it. However, author Randall Garrett had both shows beat in his 1961 short story “The Highest Treason,” in which a character says “Not if they … can prove that resistance is futile.” Despite its clear importance to futuristic science fiction, however, the word futile has ancient roots. It comes from the Latin adjective fūtilis/futtilis, which was used to describe things that are brittle or fragile and, by extension, serve no purpose. These meanings survive in the English word futile, which denotes ineffectiveness.

Hope this helped.
 
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@centuryformillenia
 
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you saw petsmart's post did you
 
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this post was futile
 
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The futility of his posts was evidently lost on him as he raged online
 
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Word of the day is: futile.

Futile is an adjective.
1
: serving no useful purpose : completely ineffective
efforts to convince him were futile

a futile attempt to control the flooding

2
archaic : occupied with things of little value, substance, or importance : frivolous
In the early Church … astronomy, like other branches of science, was generally looked upon as futile.—Andrew Dickson White

Attempts to pinpoint the first use of the phrase “resistance is futile” may ultimately be futile—that is, pointless or in vain—but that hasn’t stopped folks from trying. Popular in movies and television series from Star Trek to Stargate, Veronica Mars to Napoleon Dynamite, the slogan is often uttered by an antagonist who wants to make it clear in no uncertain terms that they will be the one to prevail in the onscreen struggle. Some people point to a 1976 episode of Doctor Who in which a character called The Master says “Resistance is futile now,” while others prefer the quote without the now, holding up a 1977 episode of Space: 1999 as being the first to feature it. However, author Randall Garrett had both shows beat in his 1961 short story “The Highest Treason,” in which a character says “Not if they … can prove that resistance is futile.” Despite its clear importance to futuristic science fiction, however, the word futile has ancient roots. It comes from the Latin adjective fūtilis/futtilis, which was used to describe things that are brittle or fragile and, by extension, serve no purpose. These meanings survive in the English word futile, which denotes ineffectiveness.

Hope this helped.
this futile little post won’t get the best of me…
 
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Ok
 
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this aint anime lil bro
 
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A professed curiosity whose substance—so artlessly divulged—coaxed a listener to devaluate whether an avowed fondness for pedal extremities and an imputation of sodomitical inclination conspired surreptitiously toward its utterance is a compliment most unwittingly bestowed.
 
A professed curiosity whose substance—so artlessly divulged—coaxed a listener to devaluate whether an avowed fondness for pedal extremities and an imputation of sodomitical inclination conspired surreptitiously toward its utterance is a compliment most unwittingly bestowed.
This is something about anal.
 
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A professed curiosity whose substance—so artlessly divulged—coaxed a listener to devaluate whether an avowed fondness for pedal extremities and an imputation of sodomitical inclination conspired surreptitiously toward its utterance is a compliment most unwittingly bestowed.
I dont care yadadada futile muh dnr
 
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Word of the day is: futile.

Futile is an adjective.
1
: serving no useful purpose : completely ineffective
efforts to convince him were futile

a futile attempt to control the flooding

2
archaic : occupied with things of little value, substance, or importance : frivolous
In the early Church … astronomy, like other branches of science, was generally looked upon as futile.—Andrew Dickson White

Attempts to pinpoint the first use of the phrase “resistance is futile” may ultimately be futile—that is, pointless or in vain—but that hasn’t stopped folks from trying. Popular in movies and television series from Star Trek to Stargate, Veronica Mars to Napoleon Dynamite, the slogan is often uttered by an antagonist who wants to make it clear in no uncertain terms that they will be the one to prevail in the onscreen struggle. Some people point to a 1976 episode of Doctor Who in which a character called The Master says “Resistance is futile now,” while others prefer the quote without the now, holding up a 1977 episode of Space: 1999 as being the first to feature it. However, author Randall Garrett had both shows beat in his 1961 short story “The Highest Treason,” in which a character says “Not if they … can prove that resistance is futile.” Despite its clear importance to futuristic science fiction, however, the word futile has ancient roots. It comes from the Latin adjective fūtilis/futtilis, which was used to describe things that are brittle or fragile and, by extension, serve no purpose. These meanings survive in the English word futile, which denotes ineffectiveness.

Hope this helped.
Nice thread mane, tag me in these threads(if u planning on making more)
 
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This is something about anal.
A cognizance so ostentatiously flaunted—yet so utterly barren of practical effect—coaxed a frustrated observer to devaluate whether circuitous algorithms and preening lexical displays conspired surreptitiously toward its construction is a compliment most unwittingly bestowed
 
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A cognizance so ostentatiously flaunted—yet so utterly barren of practical effect—coaxed a frustrated observer to devaluate whether circuitous algorithms and preening lexical displays conspired surreptitiously toward its construction is a compliment most unwittingly bestowed
it has the lines chat gpt made it
 
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Molly is the best argument
 
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Word of the day is: futile.

Futile is an adjective.
1
: serving no useful purpose : completely ineffective
efforts to convince him were futile

a futile attempt to control the flooding

2
archaic : occupied with things of little value, substance, or importance : frivolous
In the early Church … astronomy, like other branches of science, was generally looked upon as futile.—Andrew Dickson White

Attempts to pinpoint the first use of the phrase “resistance is futile” may ultimately be futile—that is, pointless or in vain—but that hasn’t stopped folks from trying. Popular in movies and television series from Star Trek to Stargate, Veronica Mars to Napoleon Dynamite, the slogan is often uttered by an antagonist who wants to make it clear in no uncertain terms that they will be the one to prevail in the onscreen struggle. Some people point to a 1976 episode of Doctor Who in which a character called The Master says “Resistance is futile now,” while others prefer the quote without the now, holding up a 1977 episode of Space: 1999 as being the first to feature it. However, author Randall Garrett had both shows beat in his 1961 short story “The Highest Treason,” in which a character says “Not if they … can prove that resistance is futile.” Despite its clear importance to futuristic science fiction, however, the word futile has ancient roots. It comes from the Latin adjective fūtilis/futtilis, which was used to describe things that are brittle or fragile and, by extension, serve no purpose. These meanings survive in the English word futile, which denotes ineffectiveness.

Hope this helped.
Jesus this shit just shows how fucked up vocabulary is in modern times. I thought everybody already knew and used words like the one displayed here.
 
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