On Aug 22, 2017, at 3:34 PM, Josh T <draconicdarkn...@gmail.com> wrote:

> I don't exactly have a strong feeling one way or another, but given that one 
> is usually given ten words in a word list, writing nineteen other words for 
> each word on the list seems pretty doable. I wouldn't know, however—I'm not 
> the one writing apologies.

I’d generally agree, and coming up with ten twenty-word sentences using ten 
specific words would not, itself, be particularly challenge. However, the word 
list constraint and the length constraint also interact with the constraint 
that the apology

> [explain] eir error, shame, remorse, and ardent desire for self-improvement

and _that_ makes it considerably more challenging than I think is entirely 
merited. It does depend on the word list, though - in particular, you have a 
knack for picking word lists with extremely awkward combinations in them. 
(Please, continue!)

As a practical example, there simply aren’t two hundred meaningful words for me 
to say about being aggressively late bidding on something. In fact, it’s likely 
inappropriate for a Yellow Card to be issued for that, but I have a separate 
proposal to address that issue.

-o

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