Greeting Card Maker | Poem Art Generator

Free online greeting card maker or poetry art generator. Create free custom printable greeting cards or art from photos and text online. Use PoetrySoup's free online software to make greeting cards from poems, quotes, or your own words. Generate memes, cards, or poetry art for any occasion; weddings, anniversaries, holidays, etc (See examples here). Make a card to show your loved one how special they are to you. Once you make a card, you can email it, download it, or share it with others on your favorite social network site like Facebook. Also, you can create shareable and downloadable cards from poetry on PoetrySoup. Use our poetry search engine to find the perfect poem, and then click the camera icon to create the card or art.



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A Whole New Word
Each English-speaker knows that funner means more fun than fun, and weirder means more weird than weird. And yet nary a one of "proper" dictionaries has neologism words - the editors must think 'nonce words' are all words for the birds! There's googobs of new words you may not find in dictionaries but whether they're real words or not - public opinion varies. The Bard invented many words that now are often seen: coldblooded, blushing, bump, impartial, pious, and obscene. Shel Silverstein and Dr. Seuss did this without a flinch with phizzant, gritchen, gink and zantz; or lorax, sneetch, and grinch. Who can forget the Lewis Carroll words galumph and chortle? Just hearing brillig, mimsy, wabe, and frabjous makes me snortle. Two words squished into one word Carroll called a "portmanteau" like Brexit, brunch, motel, romcom, or (yum) frappucino. Phonesia: calling someone (then forgetting whom you dialed) Tongueferno: getting hot sauce (when you thought you asked for mild), Cronut: (croissant plus donut) makes you want to lick your lips, and snackmosphere: the empty space found in a bag of chips. Remember Sniglets? That's when language needs a word brand-new like Chwad: disgarded chewing gum found under school desks (eww!) or aquadextrous: turning off bathwater with your toes, and pupkiss: moisture dogs leave on the window with their nose. A jokesult: someone insults you, then claims "I'm only funning" ughnition: when you start your car, but it's already running. Some new ones: fighting bellyglob, you've jogged and even fasted, then staring at your scale in angry shock, you're flubbergasted. To smallify: decrease in size; to splode is make it larger, and pifflefratz: a swear word when you lose your one phone charger. Bananawhoops: you drop your peel and some poor soul slips on it, and poetrance: when someone falls asleep to your new sonnet. A freegan: one who only eats what others give away, and slowcomotive is a train that takes. All. Blessed. Day. The hozone: where your laundered sock goes when it disappears and pubbery: a brewery that serves the latest beers. A subgenre of science fiction now is cyberpunk, and who'd have thought there'd be two in the short phrase: who'da thunk? Pet owners who believe that cats are best may seem catmatic, an argument dog lovers tend to think is troublematic. An idioddysey: a trip you'd rather not be taking and CookieD'oh a burnt mistake you'd rather not be baking. And speaking of the Simpsons (were we?) let's try to embiggen our vocab with such cromulent words (something Bart is diggin'). At one time, every word was new and took some getting used to, accepted as vernacular only when zillions choose to. Some may prefer to use a new word's functional forerunner, but as for me, I love nonce words, they're just weirder and funner. [Note: A Nonce word (also known as a neologism) is a new word created to describe a particular occasion or situation for which a word doesn’t already exist.]
Copyright © 2024 John Watt. All Rights Reserved

Book: Shattered Sighs