Chicanery. Shenanigans. Ass clown/s. Ridiculous. Asinine. Nuzzle. Lackadaisical. Cuddle. Trickery. Hell no, which is technically two, but it comes out close together. Pillage. Juggle. Excruciating. Paradoxical. Conniving. Probability. I'm probably missing some. These are words I like the sound of, and for some of them, their meanings are useful.
Mediocre I dont know why, but it sounds like a good fantasy name. Weirdly, I dont use very often. But when I hear a person using it, it always gets my attention and makes me want to listen to whatever he's saying.
I love the character Ferdinand Lyle on Penny Dreadful, and the way he uses language. He's a flamboyantly gay Egyptologist who the main characters consult during their investigations. "I have papyri I must translate. Isn't that a delicious word? Papyri. Sounds like something eaten by little Persian boys." "Mr. Chandler. You are so very tall! You render me Lilliputian." "Mischief is best enacted in small groups at very close quarters, don't you think, Mr. Chandler?"
n**ga (my way of saying hello) cod (call of duty m8) scarf (love stealing my friends amazing scarves ) camptastic(MEEEE ^_^) nerd (ME AGAIN) kushy the purple dragon (kush =week=420) thug life (dunno why) coc (the more you play with your c o c the harder it gets , clash of clans ) cock ( love it XD) boobs ( love em) kitkat (inside joke XD get it 4 fingers inside,not me though just forget this ever happened) BTEC ( easy) and of course FUCK ( does this really need explaining) i use all of these words and phrases every day.
"Lovely" Usually when someone tells me something negative, I'd say "lovely" in a sarcastic tone. But I also use "lovely" in the right context. Quite versatile in my opinion. Quite...lovely
Macabre (I had entire class in high school that was obsessed with this word, so at random quiet times people would just start whispering it) Dichotomy Amalgamation Socialization Knowledge Definitely Rather Fuck(ing) And in Japanese "samuzora" which translates to "cold sky" (so when it looks like it'll rain or snow) or "ochiba" which is "fallen leaf/leaves".