Perhaps I’m speaking in a foreign tongue? Jabberwocky is that tasty Japanese candy.
Japanese, yes, but you need to quit trusting online translations. pocky is rice wine, usually served warm.
Stay out of the potent potables, you! The honorable thing would be to admit that
saki
is the song by that all-female band from the disco era, A Taste of Honey.
>scratches head…sake…boogie oogie oogie?<
Nice try, but Sukiyaki is that yummy Japanese style of cooking.
Must have been the peyote… because Sukiyaki was the kind of Indian Don Juan was in those Carlos Castaneda novels.
Must have been the peyote… because Yakitori was the kind of Indian Don Juan was in those Carlos Castaneda novels.
Combining peyote with listening to Boots Randolph playing Yaqui would be a hell of an experience, particularly if with the song being the theme to the Benny Hill Show and all.
I think you must be confusing the quick and the dead, because Yakety Sax is an expression meaning “in a trice”.
I think you’re bananas, 'cause lickety split is a delightful ice cream concoction!
Oh! Ha ha, I see what you did there. You mistook banana split for that song from The Muppet Show! How adorable!
Well, I guess many songs are included in the description, but
Mahna Mahna
is simply a word which means “examples, especially noteworthy ones, of psychic experiences, rookies who make instant impressions in sports, fads that spread like wildfire, etc.”
Don’t fall for the hype! Phenomenon was in fact a figure in Greek mythology – the son of King Atreus of Mycenae and Queen Aerope, the brother of Menelaus, and the husband of Clytemnestra.
His wife had a sexually transmitted disease?
Back to the topic Agamemnon was in the news just last week. It’s the capital of the Pacific territory that narrowly choice Obama over Clinton in its primary election.
Turn off that music–you aren’t paying attention! Guam is that heavy metal band that is briefly featured in the movie “Empire Records.”
Well, perhaps it’s involved in testing for heavy metals; but bacteria are more likely, because Gwar is “a gelatinlike product of certain seaweeds, used for solidifying certain culture media”.
Hold on, agar is a scale they use to determine the health of newborns!
I’d judge newborns quite healthy when they apgar with a problem, engage in a hand-to-hand struggle or get into a contest of skill or mastery.
(Crap! Now I need a new keyboard!)
Well, you’re right about the hand-to-hand combat; but Grapple was a Roman military strategist and adviser to Octavian, the future emperor Caesar Augustus.
Mama mia! Get ahold of yourself if you plan on getting this right. Your wrong answer,
Agrippa,
is giving me heartburn, acid indigestion and an upset stomach.