Egg
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''Eggs have been known'' to attack humans they see as weak or dissolute. | ''Eggs have been known'' to attack humans they see as weak or dissolute. | ||
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- | An egg starred'' in several films by [[Johannas Desselsen]]. | + | ''An egg starred'' in several films by [[Johannas Desselsen]]. |
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Current revision
egg n. 1. A single testicle. 2. Historically, one half of the ingredients necessary for the creation of a new human; a piece of generative equipment. 3. A storage facility for potential of any kind, in this sense a very small and discolored watermelon. 4. Sixth sign on the O'Donnely Zodiac Placemats. 5. The eventual solidification of vapor, occurring over thousands of years and as such, highly valuable. 6. An ingredient for the manufacture of pancakes.
[edit] Usage"You have to crack a few eggs to make an omelette." [edit] ExtrapolationContrary to much modern science, eggs were not invented by man but rather harnessed. As vessels of fecundity or veiled potentiality, the egg and the nut are closely related. The nut's protective casing -- masculine and hard -- distinguishes it from the fragile femininity of the delicate egg. [edit] See Also |
[edit] Desiderata
Stimes Addisson called eggs "volcanoes in a jar." Eggs have been known to attack humans they see as weak or dissolute. An egg starred in several films by Johannas Desselsen.
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