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Kasich golly gee
Kasich golly gee





kasich golly gee kasich golly gee

Enjoy After you’ve written your Saturday post tomorrow, please link it here to this week’s prompt page and check to make sure it’s here in the comments so others can find it and see your awesome Stream of Consciousness post. "I Hear America Talking" by Stuart Berg Flexner (Von Nostrand Reinhold Co., New York, 1976). Al azalia 40, Villa pitiana rooms, Ilaria bussoni deriveapprodi, Dingle peninsula homes for sale. Use golly gee or another interjection that displays the same sentiment in your post. "Gee" by itself is a minced oath for "Jesus," so the "whiz(z)" and "whilli-whatever" still need an explanation. : The spellings begin "wh-." Webster's unabridged, 1934, has "gee whizz" with "gee whilikins" given as a variant, although nobody I know of says "whilikins." It doesn't give an origin. Calendar: Civil Mo tion s: Friday at 9:30 a.m. I know that Gee Wizz is a Minced oath for 'Jesus' and am wondering if this is just a variation of Gee Wizz. I have also seen this question posted on another site with no responses.yet. Ohio governor and Republican presidential nominee John Kasich on CBS' Face The Nation Sunday, Maconcerning Merrick Garland Supreme Court Justice. : : I use this expression frequently to express suprise or even use it as a mild reproach. John Kasich are creating a nonprofit that will fight to steer cash from any national opioid settlement. Perhaps it's an extension or elaboration of "gee whiz"? The most helpful tidbit I could find was that it's probably a minced oath based on the info from this website from 2001: Columbus, Ohio (AP) West Virginia University President Gordon Gee and former Ohio Gov. I myself say this phrase and have heard other say it too, but where does it come from? "Golly gee" seems more common, but I'm wondering about the whole phrase if anyone has any info.







Kasich golly gee