Answers:
Smiles, because there's a mile in between the two S's. I'm gonna be getting some thumbs down for this one. :)
It means fear of long words:
Hippopotomonstrosesquipp-
edaliophobia.
Kind of ironic.
Excruciatingly - Intense pain
That's all I could think of.
Antidisestablishmentarianism.
It is the concept of being against those, who are against the 'establishment'.
From 17th century England
antidisestablishmentarianism
originally, opposition to the disestablishment of the Church of England, now opposition to the belief that there should no longer be an official church in a country
side note: used to be longest word in English language
According to Wikipedia:
pneumonoultramicroscopic-
silicovolcanoconiosis
(all one word, no hyphen. it wouldn't actually type out entirely in the preview of this response)
is a 45-letter word that refers to a lung disease contracted from the inhalation of fine silica dust.
Personally, I don't see anyone whipping that out in daily conversation.
Here's one I used in a report just the other day: monosyllabic
A word that consists of a single syllable
methylchloroisothiozolinone - 27 letters
A common ingredient in shampoo. Check out the back of your bottle. (It took me MONTHS to learn how to say this word!)
The only word I could think of was 'Supercalifragilisticexpialido... from Mary Poppins. They were singing a song or something about something being cool or something, and I don't even know if I spelled it right.
Pneumonoultramicroscopicsilico...
its lung didease
i dont think anyone will ever say tho
the longest one ive used is supercalifragilistic it means great
græsslåmaskinereparationsforre...
a very legitmate danish word for "a store for repairing grass mowers"
floccinaucinihilipilification
(deem wealth as worthless thing)
as I know,
pneumonoultramicroscopic-
silicovolcanoconiosis
it's the longest word.
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