Aluminum.
Do non-english words count? My favorite is zapatos (Spanish for shoes).
Scuba.
Scuuuuuba.
Scuba scuba scuba.
Scruples.
It kinda even looks funny, typed out.
Holy hell! I thought Loblaw’s was just a faded memory from my youth! You wouldn’t happen to be from northwestern PA, would you?
banananananananananananana
Bulbous Bouffant, blubber, macadamia, gazeebo…
Yellow leather.
Toy boat.
Say repeatedly as fast as you can. It’s tough.
Monkey
Helmet
Apple
Spent about 13 years living in Ontario. Had some family in Warren, PA and we would visit a few times a year! Have been in Alberta for the last 5 years and no Blah’s Blah’s here… just the SuperStore which is part of the same conglomerate.
garbanzo beans
Avocado!
A-V-O-C-A-D-O
Aaaaaa…vocado!
Molybdemum
Mol-LIB-de-num, MOLIB-den-um, Mol-LIB-duh…mulh…mawl…LIB!
…DEN-UM!
I was thinking today how funny the word “witty” sounds on it’s own. Repetition doesn’t make it any prettier.
bookbookbookbookbookbookbookbookbookbookbookbookbwakbookbwakbookbwakbookbwak
Rubble.
Rubble. Rubble.
Rubble. Rubble. Rubble. Rubble.
I can’t help smirking when I even hear this word. Of course it’s usually used in context with explosions and earthquakes and the like, which I certainly do not find amusing, but man there sure is something funny about the word rubble. (A-hyuck, hyuck, hyuk, hyuk…)
“Scuba. Ha, yeah, it does.”
[Krusty] The young people today, they think comedy is dirty words. It’s not – it’s words that sound dirty, like “mukluk.” Mukluk. You like that? No charge. Mukluk.
That doesn’t have a very tinny sound, does it? It’s more woody. Bundle. Bundle. Haberdasher.