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the only book you can plagiarise from is the dictionary; enter plagiarism: platonic definitions of a single sound. spa spa spawn a spandex bubble on the rims for elongating width in french inches of the waist. but i liked my walk, took the scenic: empty street, night, solo, solo, night, empty street - not many donkeys sweating tears - not many relations to see: i understand money in the manual labour professions, but outside of manual professions? don't have a clue... have a poker though for a ***** you randomise whatever you want in that: never read a philosophy book that utilised grammatical categorisation efficiently: aristotle started it all off with nouns (proper names), naming and layering as i might call it: but who the hell needs plato these days given television: oh right, that's why: shout into a cave the worded nuance... what do you get? ecce echo. i appreciate god as an omni-relevant vocabulary / shouting into plato's cave provided me with thus: noun, plural i's or is, i's or is. 1. the ninth letter of the english alphabet, a vowel. 2. any spoken sound represented by the letter i or i, as in big, nice, orski. 3. something having the shape of an i (floating head on a total amputee). 4. a written or printed representation of the letter (sound) i or i. 5. a device, as a printer's type, for reproducing the letter i or i. well so much for those paper folding idiots of shadow: i shout i into plato's cave the idiots are still talking in sign language having been fed images throughout and no phonetic symbols of breaking knuckles. pronoun, nominative i, possessive my or mine, objective me; plural nominative we, possessive our or ours, objective us. 1. the nominative singular pronoun, used by a speaker in referring to himself or herself. noun, plural i's. 2. (used to denote the narrator of a literary work written in the first person singular). 3. metaphysics. the ego. that's many more echoes to come - plato was ridiculous counting six fingers on the shadow hand doing all the masturbatory talking into rabbit population truths in australia. oh **** i just shouted red into plato's cave and i heard synonymity come out! what's crimson? words with many meanings have rats in the armpits of armchairs, those eager dental riggers of bucktooth chew made fudge into glue within dental analysis conclusive in lance stance of a knight in rusty armour wishing it was oiled up copper.
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Sep 16, 2015
Sep 16, 2015 at 7:56 PM UTC
ecce echo
the only book you can plagiarise from is the dictionary; enter plagiarism: platonic definitions of a single sound. spa spa spawn a spandex bubble on the rims for elongating width in french inches of the waist. but i liked my walk, took the scenic: empty street, night, solo, solo, night, empty street - not many donkeys sweating tears - not many relations to see: i understand money in the manual labour professions, but outside of manual professions? don't have a clue... have a poker though for a ***** you randomise whatever you want in that: never read a philosophy book that utilised grammatical categorisation efficiently: aristotle started it all off with nouns (proper names), naming and layering as i might call it: but who the hell needs plato these days given television: oh right, that's why: shout into a cave the worded nuance... what do you get? ecce echo. i appreciate god as an omni-relevant vocabulary / shouting into plato's cave provided me with thus: noun, plural i's or is, i's or is. 1. the ninth letter of the english alphabet, a vowel. 2. any spoken sound represented by the letter i or i, as in big, nice, orski. 3. something having the shape of an i (floating head on a total amputee). 4. a written or printed representation of the letter (sound) i or i. 5. a device, as a printer's type, for reproducing the letter i or i. well so much for those paper folding idiots of shadow: i shout i into plato's cave the idiots are still talking in sign language having been fed images throughout and no phonetic symbols of breaking knuckles. pronoun, nominative i, possessive my or mine, objective me; plural nominative we, possessive our or ours, objective us. 1. the nominative singular pronoun, used by a speaker in referring to himself or herself. noun, plural i's. 2. (used to denote the narrator of a literary work written in the first person singular). 3. metaphysics. the ego. that's many more echoes to come - plato was ridiculous counting six fingers on the shadow hand doing all the masturbatory talking into rabbit population truths in australia. oh **** i just shouted red into plato's cave and i heard synonymity come out! what's crimson? words with many meanings have rats in the armpits of armchairs, those eager dental riggers of bucktooth chew made fudge into glue within dental analysis conclusive in lance stance of a knight in rusty armour wishing it was oiled up copper.
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Sep 16, 2015
Sep 16, 2015 at 7:56 PM UTC
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