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Usenet Posted 22 years ago
Usage

The Limeraiku

There was a young man into Tantric,
Who had an enormous great
Amount of patience.
Matti
  

Top answer

[nq:1]There was a young man into Tantric, Who had an enormous great Amount of patience. Matti[/nq] There once was a poster named Matti Who invented a new way Of making me laugh. John Dean Oxford

  • [nq:1]There was a young man into Tantric, Who had an enormous great Amount of patience.
  • Matti[/nq] There once was a poster named Matti Who invented a new way Of making me laugh.
  • John Dean Oxford
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6 Answers
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[nq:1]There was a young man into Tantric, Who had an enormous great Amount of patience. Matti[/nq]
There once was a poster named Matti
Who invented a new way
Of making me laugh.

John Dean
Oxford
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[nq:1]There was a young man into Tantric, Who had an enormous great Amount of patience.[/nq]
Matti Lamprhey
Wrote a small piece of camp re
Combining different poetic traditions
In different positions.

Jerry Friedman
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[nq:2]There was a young man into Tantric, Who had an enormous great Amount of patience. Matti[/nq]
[nq:1]There once was a poster named Matti Who invented a new way Of making me laugh.[/nq]
Actually, I discover through Google that the limeraiku traditionally follows the haiku rhythm but contains the AABBA rhymes of the limerick in sequence but not at regular intervals. So:
There's a vil
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[nq:1]Actually, I discover through Google that the limeraiku traditionally follows the haiku rhythm but contains the AABBA rhymes of the limerick in sequence but not at regular intervals. So: There's a vile old man Of Japan who roars at whores: 'Where's your ****** fan?'[/nq]
That's an interesting example. Read as a limerick, "vile" needs to have two syllables (which it readily does for me), w
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Wardrobe malfunction denied.
WMD?
Inspectors quickly supplied.
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[nq:2]There once was a poster named Matti Who invented a new way Of making me laugh.[/nq]
[nq:1]Actually, I discover through Google that the limeraiku traditionally follows the haiku rhythm but contains the AABBA rhymes of the limerick in sequence but not at regular intervals. So: There's a vile old man Of Japan who roars at whores: 'Where's your ****** fan?'[/nq]
Then there is John Dean

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