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Adding an "ing" to the end of a noun automatically makes it a verb. amirite?
by Anonymous13 years ago
That's called Verbizing.
by Anonymous13 years ago
but some need the 'e' taken away first :)
by Anonymous13 years ago
a lot of the time it becomes an adjective too. like flame for instance.
ex] You are a flaming homosexual.
by Anonymous13 years ago
it would mean to knock someone's chair out of their hands in the hallway, kinda like booking.
by Anonymous13 years ago
baconing?
by Anonymous13 years ago
Your mom and I were baconing last night.
by Anonymous13 years ago
that's effing hot.
by Anonymous13 years ago
You were eating bacon? :P
by Anonymous13 years ago
Dooring? Sandwhiching? Couching? Tableing? Last time I checked, those weren't words.
by Anonymous13 years ago
sounds like somesones got some haterade in their fridge...
by Anonymous13 years ago
I'm not hating. I'm just saying, this post isn't always true.
by Anonymous13 years ago
They can be.
Dooring: Walking through a door?
Sandwiching... Wait, that's already a word. Look it up. :)
Couching, tableing: Lying on a couch or table? :P I dunno.
It's just a joke, kinda, really. :)
by Anonymous13 years ago
(Randomer :)): I knew it was a joke haha. But they aren't normally gramatically correct words :P
by Anonymous13 years ago
I'm chairing right now :D
and wtf, spell check counts that as a word xD
by Anonymous13 years ago
That's 'cause it is. :) I forget what it means, so I guess you should check a dictionary or something. :P
by Anonymous13 years ago
Building! Ha I win! lol. This post is funny though! :)
by Anonymous13 years ago
Building is a verb, too.
by Anonymous13 years ago
catting... yeah, i do that.
by Anonymous13 years ago
bedding. :) it's a real noun. heh.
by Anonymous13 years ago
Strangely, the first thing I thought of was 'shoe-ing.' And the second thing I thought was "Well that doesn't seem like it would work in any context." Then I tried to prove myself wrong with this phrase: "Jenny is going shoe-ing later today."
I don't believe it works rather well, sir.
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