What are some good words? I mean, when you look in your heart?
I personally am a sucker for "nurbs"."parsnip"... turnip...
Give me some of them sweet words.
Patricide, Acquiesce, stuff with sexy Latin roots️
Agreed on the sexiness of Latin, but I want to take a moment to appreciate how you directly went for patricide.
XD hehehe this is why villains always get the best lines:3
I like the words serendipity and soliloquy.
Bittersweet, silhouette, transparency~
Sounds like names for two siamese cats, "serendipity and soliloquy "...
Great cat name ideas!
diegesis is a really lovely word imo
Ooh, I quite like bittersweet. The word itself not particularly, not quite as funny as parsnip or elegant as soliloquy, but the concept behind it makes me love it nonetheless. It's a goodie
Payed. I know it's wretchedly capitalistic but yo, at a certain point it makes freelance hearts pirouette with joy.
"payed opportunity", "payed flight", "tools payed". Please.
And for the soul, I really enjoy:
venomous, macabre, and chlorofluorocarbon (it flutters!)
Lovely for sure, but I'm on team mimesis
Rendezvous, finale, bullhonkey, symptom
Muse, reminisce, solemn, somber, liberty, ardent, ebb, elaborate, ornate, inheritance, memento, weary
Some of them have beautiful meanings as well as sounds, but all of them are beautiful to me, even if they represent the darker side of life.
i like words like "crash", "smash", "strike", "power", "style", "play". At least in english those words sound cool.....that reminds me, the word "cool" is cool. What else....The words "glorious", "epic", "majestic", "amusing", "awesome" and "legendary".
also.....paralellepyped is an underrated word......
Majestic is a good word. It's simply... majestic
Serendipity, peiskos, tenebris, saffron, sassafras, sapphire, Aurora borealis, opia, amor, dulce
I like the word "sombra". It sounds so elegant.
when spanish is your native language you get to use it ocassionally
apeath (as in your daft apeath!) (idiot)eggin (as in "'es not here 'e went eggin!) Nowt! (nothing)
these are both from Northern England.