| 6. | Blurb | ||
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A spill on oneself. 1. "You blurbed spaghetti sauce on your shirt!"
2. Kathy had a blurb on her pants when the dip fell off her chip. |
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| 1. | blurb | ||
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A blurb is just a short written peice about something. Usually it's in reference to a newspaper article that briefly mentions a barely newsworthy item. The blurb on the second page only scratched the surface of the material.
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| 2. | blurb | ||
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A dose of highly concentrated spin intended to deflect direct perception and critical thought while presenting a desirable or attractive image to the public. She's a master of Tae Kwan Do, a skilled brain surgeon, rock star, and wrote all of Shakespeare's sonnets. I read it in her blurb.
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| 3. | Blurb | ||
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A small amount of text, used beneath photographs in newspapers, or to thank someone in a book. Hey Nick, I'm giving you a blurb in my new book, what do you want it to say?
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| 4. | Blurb | ||
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Rolled up or normal Cigarette
OR! A cigar You got a blurb mate?
Im out for a blurb. Omg i didnt know you blurbed?! Yeah im blurbing now. |
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| 5. | blurb | ||
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A small, dense amount of descriptive text which can be fired like a projectile. Shoot me a blurb on that, Tim, and I'll get back to you this afternoon.
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| 7. | blurb | ||
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To lie but to tell the truth at the same time for the sake of being good. (verb) blurbed, blurbing, blurbs Blackmailing is the most common form of blurbing.
1. That one photographer totally blurbed about Britney spears. 2. This photo about Britney Spears is blurbing. 3. I'm gonna blurb to my teacher about how my homework couldn't get turned in. |
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