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Topic: The virtual kiss 😘
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Fri 03/16/18 05:53 AM

Sluup... :kissing_heart::sweat_drops:

Stu what kind of kiss is that lol sounds more like eating? rofl

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Fri 03/16/18 10:05 AM
that's a big sloppy wet baby kissbigsmile

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Fri 03/16/18 10:08 AM
Totally depends on 2 things :
1,use of tongue or not
2,has she got her teeth in.

jazzinc's photo
Fri 03/16/18 10:13 AM
Virtual kisses?...OMG!...online? text only? audio or video calls? All is online today. It depends.

Text only;;;v kss are just a sequence of strange characters at the end of a text. Here; people use xx or xoxo. Equivalent to " I'll see you soon".

One day; cell phones will send "sound kisses"....they will be virtual always.

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Fri 03/16/18 04:59 PM

that's a big sloppy wet baby kissbigsmile

From a baby rofl

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Fri 03/16/18 05:00 PM

Totally depends on 2 things :
1,use of tongue or not
2,has she got her teeth in.


That’s way too funny afib roflroflrofl

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Fri 03/16/18 05:01 PM

Virtual kisses?...OMG!...online? text only? audio or video calls? All is online today. It depends.

Text only;;;v kss are just a sequence of strange characters at the end of a text. Here; people use xx or xoxo. Equivalent to " I'll see you soon".

One day; cell phones will send "sound kisses"....they will be virtual always.

Yes nothing is impossible anymore, people think of the most crazy things to sustain this crazy life slaphead

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Mon 03/26/18 08:01 AM
I wonder how you spell the sound of a kiss sounding like sucking snails from its shells sorta like lips smacking noisily lol

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Mon 03/26/18 08:23 AM
:snail:surprised

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Mon 03/26/18 08:30 AM

I wonder how you spell the sound of a kiss sounding like sucking snails from its shells sorta like lips smacking noisily lol


Love those kind of kisses! smitten

I'm not sure how to spell the way it sounds though. It's been a long time, so I'd probably need to practice to remember how it sounds.

We'll need some volunteers Sis bigsmile drinker

Tom4Uhere's photo
Mon 03/26/18 10:06 AM
Phonetic spelling is the representation of vocal sounds which express pronunciations of words. It is a system of spelling in which each letter represents invariably the same spoken sound.
Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of phonetic symbols. The International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) is an alphabetic system of phonetic notation based primarily on the Latin alphabet.

http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Wiktionary:International_Phonetic_Alphabet





Spelling Interjections and Exclamations
http://theeditorsblog.net/2014/05/29/spelling-interjections-and-exclamations/

aah—drawn out sound of pleasure, relief, or relaxation; the plural is often paired with ooh for an exclamation of wonder or surprise (oohs and aahs)

ah—placeholder signifying hesitation, confusion, ignorance, or even guilt, often indicating that the speaker is thinking frantically; variations are er, uh, and um; also an interjection signifying understanding (Ah, I get it)

aha—exclamation of discovery or realization

ahh—exclamation of surprise or fright; also a variant of aah used as a sound of pleasure, relief, or relaxation

argh—exclamation of frustration, comparable to rats or drat; sometimes used for a pirate’s exclamation

arrr—pirate’s sound of agreement; pirate’s exclamation

aw—mild exclamation of protest, disappointment, or entreaty (Aw, I didn’t mean it.)

aww—exclamation over the cuteness of something

bah—old-fashioned exclamation of dismissal or contempt; compare to the contemporary word so (Bah, who cares? Bah! Humbug!)

beh—variation of bah

blah—interjection used as filler (typically written three times) to show that either someone droned on about a topic or what had been said was predictable and/or commonplace and all parties now listening understand what was said without it being necessary to repeat what was said (And then she moaned about her husband. You know, blah blah blah.)

blech—mild to medium exclamation of disgust

blergh—an interjection of any combination of disgust, boredom, dissatisfaction, and other negative emotions; also blurgh and blargh; probably from a combination of bleh and argh and/or ugh.

bwahaha—less common variant of mwahaha; often bwah-ha-ha

criminy—mild swear word, somewhat old-fashioned; euphemism for Christ

duh—exclamation of exasperation or disdain over the explanation of something obvious

eh—mild exclamation of unconcern or indifference (Eh, who cares.); solicitation to repeat something (Eh, what was that?); question tag (You heard about it, eh?)

er—placeholder signifying hesitation, confusion, ignorance, or even guilt, often indicating that the speaker is thinking frantically; may be followed by an ellipsis (Er . . . I’m not sure.); variations are ah, um, and uh

erm—variation of er (I’ve never seen this in a published book that I can recall and never heard a real person say it, but it shows up in a lot of manuscripts I see)

ew—exclamation of disgust, typically over something nasty; can be made more dramatic by repeating letters (Ewww, that’s foul. Eeew, that stinks.)

geez—exclamation of exasperation; a mild oath to be used in place of Jesus; also sheesh

hmm—placeholder interjection signifying that the speaker is thinking or considering a response to what has been said

hooah—U.S. Army sound of agreement or affirmation; battle cry; [pronounced hua, accent on hoo]

hooyah—U.S. Navy sound of agreement or affirmation; battle cry

huh—interjection used to signify a dawning revelation or admittance of ignorance over a piece of information (Huh, is that so.); also used as a question tag to solicit agreement (I guess this means we’re leaving now, huh?)

humph—mild exclamation of disagreement or reluctant agreement; also exclamation of displeasure; variations include hmph, hrmph, harumph, harumpf, harrumph; old-fashioned and often put in the mouths of elderly men and crotchety women

hrmph, hmph, harumph, harumpf, harrumph—variations of humph

ick—exclamation of disgust; also yuck

meh—old-fashioned mild interjection of dismissal or indifference, much like beh

mm-hmm—murmur of agreement that may also indicate inattention; much like uh-huh

mmm—murmur of pleasure

mwahaha—mock-sinister laugh, often used for a villain; also mwah-ha-ha; variant is bwahaha

nah—informal no; opposite of yeah; [pronounced two ways: like the n-a in nap or the n-o in not rather than as nay]

nuh-uh—childish argumentative no; opposite of yuh-huh; [stress on uh]

oh—word signifying comprehension or surprise (often overused in dialogue); can be drawn out by repeating letters (Ohhh, it’s so beautiful.); [pronounced like the letter o]

oof—like oomph, often comic or exaggerated sound of breath being knocked from someone from a blow to the belly; [a short sound, usually not changed by adding letters]

ooh—exclamation of wonder or surprise; often paired with aah (oohs and aahs); [rhymes with Sue and dew]

oomph—sound of exhalation of breath, often after a collision (may be comic)

oorah—U.S. Marine sound of agreement or affirmation; battle cry

ow—exclamation of pain

pfft—old-fashioned sound of dismissal or unconcern (not common in contemporary fiction); also phfft

phew—exclamation of relief, often used humorously in contemporary fiction

phooey—mild interjection used to show disagreement or disbelief; also a mild curse word akin to darn or drat, but more genteel

pshaw—old-fashioned exclamation of contempt or disagreement (not common in contemporary fiction except in historicals and as deliberate reference to its use in the past); [the p is pronounced]

psst—(usually) quiet interjection used to gain the attention of someone else

sheesh—exclamation of exasperation; a mild oath used in place of Jesus; also geez

shh or shhh—command to keep quiet, often accompanied by finger to lips

shssh—variation of shhh

shush—command to keep quiet, a combination of shh and hush; more a true word than a sound

ta-da—exclamation to express success or to point attention at something

ugh—exclamation of mild disgust

uh—placeholder signifying hesitation, confusion, ignorance, or even guilt, often indicating that the speaker is thinking frantically; may be followed by an ellipsis (Uh, I think it’s that one. Uh . . . I’m not sure that what you’re saying is true.); variations are ah, er, and um

uh, uh, uh—command, often to young children, to stop doing something (Uh, uh, uh, don’t touch that.)

uh huh—interjection signifying understanding and sometimes, but not always, agreement (use it to show someone is saying they understand what is being said even though they might not agree with what is said); informal yes; also uh-huh

uh oh—exclamation of dismay or anticipation of something bad happening; used often by young children; also uh-oh

uh uh—informal no; also uh-uh and unh-unh

um—placeholder signifying hesitation, confusion, ignorance, or even guilt, often indicating that the speaker is thinking frantically; variations are ah, er, and uh; often repeated as um, um, um (Um, um, um, I’m thinking) and stretched out as ummm

unh-unh—informal no; variant of uh uh and uh-uh

whoa—exclamation of surprise or shock (not woah)

yay—exclamation of triumph or victory (Yay, we won!)

yea—yes; used in the context of a spoken vote; rhymes with and is often paired with nay

yeah—contemporary informal yes; opposite of nah (Yeah, I get it.); [does not rhyme with nay, and I freely admit I don’t know how to explain how this one sounds—how about a link to Merriam-Webster, which has a decent recording of the word?]

yech—variation of yuck, an exclamation of disgust

yeow—exclamation of pain, shock, or surprise; also yow

yikes—exclamation of (negative) surprise or shock; comic

yow—variation of yeow, an exclamation of pain, shock, or surprise

yowza—exclamation of pleasure or pleased surprise or a pleasant shock

yuck—exclamation of disgust; also ick

yuh-huh—argumentative or insistent childish yes; [accent on huh]; opposite of nuh-uh

Tom4Uhere's photo
Mon 03/26/18 10:13 AM
http://mentalfloss.com/article/55091/how-write-sound-kiss

In English we have a few different ways to write the sound of a kiss: muah, smack, xxx. They get the idea across, but none of them imitate the actual sound of a kiss. Other languages have the same problem. In Thai it's chup, in German, schmatz, in Greek, mats-muts, in Malayalam, umma, in Japanese, chu. There are two common elements in kiss words across languages. First, a kiss word will usually have a sound made by pressing the lips together (m, p, b), which approximates the lip pursing of a real kiss. In addition, or instead, it may have a sharp, "noisy" sound (ch, ts, k) that approximates the air intake "click" of a real kiss.

What's needed for a true kiss sound is a way to represent the smacking sound caused by the intake of air through closed lips. And linguistics has one! The kiss sound is technically a bilabial lingual ingressive click. "Bilabial" because of the lips, "lingual ingressive" because the air intake is caused by a pressure drop in the mouth caused by action of the tongue (in other words, sucking) and "click" for the pop of release from the pressure change. There are languages in the Tuu and Kx'a language families of Southern Africa that use this sound. So the International Phonetic Alphabet, the standard for representing the sounds of the world's spoken languages, has a symbol for it. This is how you write a bilabial click: in the word aʘa.

This Valentine's Day leave the "mwah"s and the "XO"s behind and impress your love with the real thing, sealed with a ʘ.

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Mon 03/26/18 04:05 PM

:snail:surprised

tongue2

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Mon 03/26/18 04:08 PM


I wonder how you spell the sound of a kiss sounding like sucking snails from its shells sorta like lips smacking noisily lol


Love those kind of kisses! smitten

I'm not sure how to spell the way it sounds though. It's been a long time, so I'd probably need to practice to remember how it sounds.

We'll need some volunteers Sis bigsmile drinker

Most definitely sis hhhhmmm but this one is for you mwah! So now make them line up ok winking

no photo
Mon 03/26/18 04:15 PM

http://mentalfloss.com/article/55091/how-write-sound-kiss

In English we have a few different ways to write the sound of a kiss: muah, smack, xxx. They get the idea across, but none of them imitate the actual sound of a kiss. Other languages have the same problem. In Thai it's chup, in German, schmatz, in Greek, mats-muts, in Malayalam, umma, in Japanese, chu. There are two common elements in kiss words across languages. First, a kiss word will usually have a sound made by pressing the lips together (m, p, b), which approximates the lip pursing of a real kiss. In addition, or instead, it may have a sharp, "noisy" sound (ch, ts, k) that approximates the air intake "click" of a real kiss.

What's needed for a true kiss sound is a way to represent the smacking sound caused by the intake of air through closed lips. And linguistics has one! The kiss sound is technically a bilabial lingual ingressive click. "Bilabial" because of the lips, "lingual ingressive" because the air intake is caused by a pressure drop in the mouth caused by action of the tongue (in other words, sucking) and "click" for the pop of release from the pressure change. There are languages in the Tuu and Kx'a language families of Southern Africa that use this sound. So the International Phonetic Alphabet, the standard for representing the sounds of the world's spoken languages, has a symbol for it. This is how you write a bilabial click: in the word aʘa.

This Valentine's Day leave the "mwah"s and the "XO"s behind and impress your love with the real thing, sealed with a ʘ.

That was awesome Tomflowerforyou all very interesting. I wanted to comment on you post through phonetic sounds and here goes:
Uhm ....aaaaww...

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Mon 03/26/18 04:19 PM
Haven’t finished slaphead fat fingers gosh. So ok :
Uhm ... aaww...aha!...hhmm... pssst ...thanks Tomflowerforyou

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Mon 03/26/18 04:21 PM
Wanted it like a longer story but it’s just too early for me lol I bet you can do it better Tom:thumbsup:

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Mon 03/26/18 04:21 PM



I wonder how you spell the sound of a kiss sounding like sucking snails from its shells sorta like lips smacking noisily lol


Love those kind of kisses! smitten

I'm not sure how to spell the way it sounds though. It's been a long time, so I'd probably need to practice to remember how it sounds.

We'll need some volunteers Sis bigsmile drinker

Most definitely sis hhhhmmm but this one is for you mwah! So now make them line up ok winking


mwah! I'm sure now that you're here they'll start lining up winking flowerforyou

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Mon 03/26/18 04:25 PM




I wonder how you spell the sound of a kiss sounding like sucking snails from its shells sorta like lips smacking noisily lol


Love those kind of kisses! smitten

I'm not sure how to spell the way it sounds though. It's been a long time, so I'd probably need to practice to remember how it sounds.

We'll need some volunteers Sis bigsmile drinker

Most definitely sis hhhhmmm but this one is for you mwah! So now make them line up ok winking


mwah! I'm sure now that you're here they'll start lining up winking flowerforyou

Lol sis blushing I’ll have to brush my hair first hahahaha rofl but they have to brush their lips including their teeth rofl

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Mon 03/26/18 04:27 PM





I wonder how you spell the sound of a kiss sounding like sucking snails from its shells sorta like lips smacking noisily lol


Love those kind of kisses! smitten

I'm not sure how to spell the way it sounds though. It's been a long time, so I'd probably need to practice to remember how it sounds.

We'll need some volunteers Sis bigsmile drinker

Most definitely sis hhhhmmm but this one is for you mwah! So now make them line up ok winking


mwah! I'm sure now that you're here they'll start lining up winking flowerforyou

Lol sis blushing I’ll have to brush my hair first hahahaha rofl but they have to brush their lips including their teeth rofl


Definitely! rofl

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