Really!

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9 years ago

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i wish i wasn't allergic to pizza

9 years ago
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I like pizza with Pepperoni

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9 years ago
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I'm Hungry

9 years ago
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9 years ago
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Now you made me want pizza...

9 years ago
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When it comes to pizza, the spice must flow.

9 years ago
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Umm... I think you meant "drool," and not "dribble." Aside from basketball, the only other time you would dribble would be if you are suffering from diarrhea.

Pizza time! And Beyonce's got it.

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9 years ago
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It's a reference of one of my childhood games, LEGO Island 2
https://vine.co/v/MexBTMjhv6A
Hidden spoiler links when :/

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9 years ago
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heh... What is it with men that they can interpret anything as a sexual reference?

Gotta love those bad translations, though. D

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9 years ago
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The Oxford Dictionary politely disagrees:
"
Definition of 'dribble' in English:
verb
...
1.2 [NO OBJECT] Allow saliva to run from the mouth:
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SYNONYMS
drool, slaver, slobber, salivate, drivel, water at the mouth;
...
"
(source: http://www.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/english/dribble)

Also, random dancing pizza:

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9 years ago
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You are using the definition/example they give of "a dribble" (noun) in place of "dribbling" (verb). That is incorrect and misleading.
[Correction: They use a similar sentence in both cases.]

The verb "to dribble" implies a flow of liquid, whereas drooling is more of a dripping (i.e. minimal flow). Normally, you dribble cream into your coffee, but you drool saliva from your mouth. If your mouth is already full of liquid, you might dribble that liquid out. As most people do not usually hold that much saliva in their mouth at one time, however, it is highly unusual to dribble saliva.

9 years ago*
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Nope, I was clearly (and merely) quoting from the section that defines '"dribble" as a verb.

9 years ago
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I stand corrected. My explanation, however, remains pertinent.

9 years ago
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I missed your threads.

9 years ago
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