Scandalous Scamps Schemingly School Scurrilous Skunks

Might this be a politically proclived post in disguise?

Scandalous — disgraceful; shameful or shocking; improper; a louse devoted to scandal

Scamps — unscrupulous and often mischievous people; rascals; rogues; scalawags

Schemingly — making sly, underhanded, crafty plans

School — to educate; teach; train

Scurrilous — characterized by or using low buffoonery; coarsely jocular or derisive

Skunks — thoroughly contemptible people

And now you’ve had your delightfully delicious daily dictionary dose.

I suppose you thought this would be a politically proclived post pertaining to one or more or all of the following: Read it all

The Fine Art of the Double Cliché

Clichés enjoy overuse.

But if you gag on them, you can learn to enjoy their use again…by marrying some of them to each other.

Not only is the double cliché fun to use, it packs thrice the punch of either of its parts.

“Stick your neck out” and “Go out on a limb” both encourage risk-taking…and have grown weary of serving the language apart from each other. Solution? Pair ’em up!

Stick your neck out on a limb!

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Above all, love God!