Sunday, February 5, 2012

Feb 6 is for a certain kind of words starting with F...


Hi friends,

We all know I'm not going to post lists with some F words.  Just don't go there.  But there are lots of F words that you can play with!  Here are some flowers from Provincetown to inspire you.  Come up with a list of five and a sentence using them and post in comments.  Reminder: Comments are moderated. 

cheers,
Laura

8 comments:

  1. OK, I'll bite. Frump, flummery, flummox, fustian, fume

    Unable to avoid being a frump, Caterina donned her fustian flummery smelling of mothballs, and went to the party, causing her cousin Dellara to say Caterina could flummox a saint and to fume about her to all their friends.

    Bismarck

    ReplyDelete
  2. flowers, flow, flossy, forest, frost

    When the frost hit the forest, the flow stopped in the streams and all the flossy flowers lost their glow.

    Dastardly Dick

    No fun, should let us use ANY f-words! Nabokov would not be amused.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I'll use flake for the first f-word I mean but cannot say
    foment, follow, fascinate, and
    fig for the second one I cannot say on here.

    Robert wanted to fascinate, follow, and flake Patsy but he could not succeed in fomenting the fig he wanted.

    Rochester

    ReplyDelete
  4. OK Rochester, I see what you're up to, but technically you've satisfied the censor. Hmm.
    Laura

    ReplyDelete
  5. Frisky, fabulize, fawn, focus, frozen

    The fawn became too frisky and fell through the ice on the stream while Giles made a photograph of the frozen fawn to fabulize using a focus on the surface of the ice alone.

    Mosca

    ReplyDelete
  6. follicle, festers, friendship, fetid, forgiveness

    The fetid friendship in want of forgiveness is like a follicle festering needing healing.

    ReplyDelete
  7. fail, faulty, feared, fingering, flat:

    Frank feared that he would fail his orchestra audition because his C sharp was so flat and his fingering was so faulty.

    ReplyDelete
  8. food, fests, frequently, famous, familiar, fulfillment

    Food fests occur fairly frequently at the Mead Feed Hall, where foodies' function is to chow down, fall to, fatten on, feast upon, lick, pick, gulp down, graze, praise, sip the flip--where they're 'fools all for food' for the famous, familiar fare--fulfillment for all, and the 'pull towards full' of the fiesta forces all to follow with a satiation siesta.

    ReplyDelete