Werewolf implies a lesser known and more present Arewolf
They speak of great phophet Willbewolf to come
More like “Waswolf”.
Regretfullywolf
When I’m searching for do I ask “Wherewolf?” or “Wherewerewolf?” if it was a group of werewolves that are gone “Wherewerewolves”?
Therewolves! <points>

And…now that music is stuck on loop in my head.
Could be worse (I’m looking at you, Cantina Band!)
God damn it
But you never ask “howwolf?” ☹️
Yes, howwulf and and howwoofwulf! Only when I see it though…
And if you want to know where they used to be, not where they are, you have to ask “Wherewerewerewolves?”

if it’s a group it’s “there wolves”

I believe wolf should be pronounced as woofl. Fewer people would be afraid of a woofl than a wolf.
You pronounce those differently?
I think werewolf is pronounced the same as “where”
Me after killing a werewolf, but I realize some of the blood got on my open wound and I’m now transforming: more like WE’REwolf?
Edit: I like to imagine the one single down vote was cast alongside a potentially heavy sigh of disappointment after they read my comment
I think I would say "more like was wolf " Makes the same point without explaining even if it sounds a little clunky.
Are there any situations where the second person singular forms of a verb are not the same as the plural ones?
The verb follows the conjugation of the subject, and in modern English, the singular second person is the same word as the plural second person (you) , but that wasn’t always the case. In Old English, the second person plural was thou, and verbs conjugated differently - for example, you are (singular) and thou art (plural).
You mixed up singular and plural, thou was used for singular/informal situations and ye (you) was used for plural/formal situations
Oh, so I did.
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That’s not a verb
Tweets are not memes.
Username checks out
(I meant the new dad type joke?)








