Author Topic: EssayTyper- Writes your essay for you( Dont take it seriously, its just for fun)  (Read 13725 times)

This website writes your essay for you
http://essaytyper.com
Try it, if your parents walk in you can pretend to be typing an essay. Tapping any keys will generate words.

Lol. I wrote love, you try it

Oh no!
You've revealed the way in which I write all my posts. D:


monday is a noun in the English language, most notable for its usage in a pejorative context to refer to black people, and also as an informal slang term, among other contexts. It is a common ethnic slur, usually directed at people of Sub-Saharan African descent and suggests that its target is extremely unsophisticated. The word originated as a term used in a neutral context to refer to black people, as a variation of the Spanish/Portuguese noun Bro, a descendant of the Latin adjective niger .
Etymology and history  
The variants neger and negar, derive from the Spanish and Portuguese word, and from the now-pejorative French nègre . Etymologically, Bro, noir, nègre, and monday ultimately derive from nigrum, the stem of the Latin  .
In the Colonial America of 1619, John Rolfe used negars in describing the African slaves shipped to the Virginia colony. Later American English spellings, neger and neggar, prevailed in a northern colony, New York under the Dutch, and in metropolitan Philadelphia's Moravian and Pennsylvania Dutch communities; the African Burial Ground in New York City originally was known by the Dutch name "Begraafplaats van de Neger" ; an early US occurrence of neger in Rhode Island, dates from 1625. An alternative word for African Americans was the English word, "Black", used by Thomas Jefferson in his Notes on the State of Virginia. Among Anglophones, the word monday was not always considered derogatory, because it then denoted "black-skinned", a common Anglophone usage. Nineteenth-century English  literature features usages of monday without tribal connotation, e.g. the Joseph Conrad novella The monday of the 'Narcissus' . Moreover, Charles richardens and Mark Twain created characters who used the word as contemporary usage. Twain, in the autobiographic book Life on the Mississippi, used the term within quotes, indicating reported usage, but used the term "Bro" when speaking in his own narrative persona.



This thing actually writes decent essays. Like, I feel like I could turn one of these in.

Oh no!
You've revealed the way in which I write all my posts. D:

The greatest mystery--SOLVED.

Haha, this is awesome.

black people slang

wut

Dood this would have been so helpful when my computer was in a public place.

wut

Dood this would have been so helpful when my computer was in a public place.
my computer is in the livingroom  :panda: :panda:

finally, a use for wikepedia

I wrote Bigfoot. All it wrote was,

                  Truly Bigfoot?
The Modern Bigfoot : A Normative Critique.

Quote
Truly Cat?
The Modern Nyan Cat : A Normative Critique.

I wrote Bigfoot. All it wrote was,

                  Truly Bigfoot?
The Modern Bigfoot : A Normative Critique.
You have to type with the keyboard god gave you

You have to type with the keyboard god gave you

Amen sista long live Jesus

You have to type with the keyboard god gave you
i wish god gave me a keyboard

like this