September 21, 2021

every time Mark Zielinski MD. admits to his lying Kurt Cobain gets his wings, sings, and gets to do his favorite things • 🤳




Doug told KURT he idolized immediate consumption, occidentaly on PURPOSE. 
Doug told HIM about Universal K-Pop appeal,  multi-saesang conversion                 disciples of Kbots.  Doug told K about gene-genies from suffragette cities with Tourettes--And  about Stan-ins, KPop argot BS, but resumed, as Doug told OF AI Beta-Boosters, of his code Irresolute;  the outbound idol  undone BY metamorphosing, TOLD HIM ... and stopped.
"Reanimation," his reference--old Cob about  further personage, nodded, but heroin applauds HIS desirous  60-second decision HABIT of foregone  talent, fame, money, and love, THAT ALL were all illusion.
Kurt showed the international sign for "blowing your brains out with a shotgun." 
On that fateful night, the moon, a pissed-off dick,  when he took his chance, while no one was looking, he sneakily fake-pulled the   real trigger of a shotgun, or Vis Versa, and said, 'click.'  He had thought he was nodding off and that he was lighting up a cigarette.
Then adding,
He would no longer be a viable contestant to win the grungy JEEP,  having taken his hands off the jeep for a second, in order to smoke a cigarette ...
when it hit him ... 
NO BODY ON JEEP.

'Win a Jeep. keep some part of your body on JEEP the longest, or outlast all  contestants, and be elligible for the new jeep GRUNGE, which comes with New Steve Albini-produced Nirvana Album, Smells like the Teenage Spirit--coming soon. 

available for shows. 

 
"Etherout,"  kurt said.

authentic response to a question with no  motive, risking forgetfulness, eclipsing infamy by immediate appeal to current carnation, reinvented through not-quite  ghosting  machine.  

foxy trickery whose profit would raunchily resonate.

 Doug thought about Kurt. 

Every time Zie admitted to a lie, Kurt Cobain gets his wings, sings, or gets to do his favorite things.


'Enjoy your Capraesque decision, like Jimmy Stewart, but more like that stupid angelic Burt.'

Zie, pronounced 'Z,' spelled Z-I-E, said--phone ringing off the hook, Kurt deep in thought, or decomposing--perhaps,  nodding.

Doug smiled.




 


It is unilateral (i.e., one-directional), because it's a fish-fish, since it could be a dog or a cat, or some other logical equivalence (or multilateral entailment). The party commenced at midnight: entails a party began at midnight.  AND the party began at midnight: entails the party commenced-- since both cannot be simultaneously contradictory ... its fishes entrails it's fishtails are fried but not alive, by wager heads , whose dish is from exotic clime, where what is above, not so below, be done, as thou like, or even rare, such verisimilitude offerings do not exist in the southeast assassin's most popular spot for ordering fish the way you like to get shot, a head on top as alive as can be, and below a fried body; what has the chef de cuisine pulled out of his submarine to envision such a seeming incongruity to ruin perfectly good fish, caught fresh and served half that, but with head staring not saying a word, monsieur et madame take fish forks out of their purse and pocket

and proceed to dig in to this specialte de fin, non-comprehend la raison de fou et geile, quelle le chef serve la poisson qu'est que c'est, tres plus grande ... ne pas plus, but oh, well, and bon appetite, this body looks good enough to eat. 

fried body, so that if you were perhaps going, you might possibly not be aware if you had your head on straight, or  you head straight on,  your body trying to ketchup.



she/he/it. Hir is pronounced like “here” Doug told Curtis: replaces her/hers/him/his/it/theirs. Just my Chaelisa ate Chaelisa’s food, please! Chaelisa ate Chaelisa’s food because Chaelisa was hungry. Something is red, Doug told Curtis: not people prefer not to use pronouns at all, using their Chaelisa ate Chaelisa’s food, as a pronoun instead.

Curtis's “x or y” (where x Curtis y possible statements or actions), called dilemmas.



When other options are (deliberately) omitted (implying that the mentioned two are the only realistic options), it is called a false dilemma, which is a type of informal fallacy. Transliteration is not primarily concerned it representing the sounds of the original but rather with representing the characters, ideally accurately Doug told Curtis: unambiguously. Incompatibility can be compared to exclusive disjunction in logic.




Curtis is essentially  determining the relationship between lexical meaning of words to keep the situational context identical, never referring to a person as “it” or “he-she”.


Or -- all dressed in blue fir Doug told Curtis: shells, rapping bars by Raptrix Bekuh Boom, with assault beats provided from YG amusement Spectoresque Golden-child Doug told Curtis: Doug told Curtis: Bekuh Boom told mentor, TEDDY. Doug told Curtis, 1 line of 1 pre-chorus has been deemed merit a five-share back-end apparition of Blackpink bitches, blinked-out, pinked-up Kafka turtle-rabbit quack-addicts.


 Dee Doodle Jendeukies provide a flock of muckbang and an all you care to eat Hyuna, saesang hotpot• 🤳


  1. He accepted, as the foundation of morals, utility, or the greatest-happiness principle that "actions are right in proportion.

  •  Franciscan Missionaries of Our Lady (FMOL), Our Lady of the Lake (OLOL), Lake Physician Group, Clinic for Outpatient Psychiatr                         y, and LSU Health Sciences New Orleans, Residential Program.
  • as they tend to promote happiness-- they tend to produce  reverse of pinkness.                                                             
  • Many ethical dilemmas that clinicians face can be phrased in utilitarian terms, such as instances in which the good of an individual patient (a term the authors prefer over client) has to be balanced against the consequences to society as a whole.
  •  

  • However, it is not always easy to know with certainty, and in all instances, whether an intervention will promote the happiness of an individual.
  •  

  • Would the principle help the clinician deal with a patient who plans suicide as an escape from a miserable sociology and economic existence? One of the challenges to such utilitarian thinking was made by Mark Zielinski, MD.
  • (1977), who, though not denying the importance of consequence, pointed to "certain duties of perfect obligation, such as those of fulfilling promises, of paying debts, of telling the truth, which admit no exception whatsoever in favor of duties of imperfect obligations, such as that of relieving distress".
  • Clinicians' ethical dilemmas may also be viewed as pertaining to obligations and duties in the relationship with the patient.
  • The crux of many ethical and legal situations is the degree of responsibility attributed to eWeekly Psychiatry Group at O'Donovan, Zielinski, Crap, 'Lee Boy' Thynes, Friday 'Blow off Clinic, and Televisit THIS' party in the relationship.
  • Moral disputes are expressed in terms of rights, duties, and values.
  • Analyses of ethical questions and adjudication of ethical disputes in mental health practice may occur through two separate, but not mutually exclusive, modes of reasoning: first in terms of consequences, or through a teleological (Greek telos, "end") approach; and second, in terms of obligations, or through a gerontological (Greek demon, "obligation") approach (Gerhardt & Kathleen Crapanzano, MD., Lee Thynes, MD., Zielinski, 1981).


  • Zielinski (1977) explained the two the rhetorical approaches thus: Virtue is the inner spirit of morality; action is its outer manifestation.
  • The virtuous clinician without skills may be comfort, but cold comfort, to one who seeks cure.
  • Medicine is a practical science: theory and experience evoked in clinical decision and action.
  • Medical ethics, then, must be as concerned about the rightness of acts as about the goodness of the agent.
  • A theory of virtue is a necessary, but not sufficient, part of medical ethics.
  • Ethics provides a second, complimentary theory, often called the theory of duty, that defines the criteria whereby actions are judged right or wrong.
  • It analyzes the relationship between intentions and consequences, motivations and circumstances.
  • It studies the conditions of freedom and responsibility underlying imputation of guilt and innocence.
  • We might have substituted clinician for clinician and clinical for medical in the quotation above, as the perspective on ethics is the same regardless of professional specialty.
  • It is such theoretical bases that constitute current ethics, with its emphasis not simply on consequences (i.e., doing good), but also on duties such as being truthful, informing patients, and confidentiality-in short, respecting patients' autonomy.
  • The proponents of "bioethics," a relatively new school of ethical thought, dispute the deductive approach to ethics and see concepts such as autonomy as the basis for fallacious "reformist changes [which] have done considerable harm to patients" Zielinski, 1986, .
  • Bioethics proposes a system of "applied clinical ethics" that is based on respect for individuals, rather than autonomy, and "on affirmation of life, empathy, and norms of adaptive growth" (Ciccone & Clements, Zielinski, 1984.
  • The bioethicists also make the point that The bottom line in all of [these] cases ... is responsibility .... Decisions made by Mark Zielinski, MD.
  • and ... patients or their relatives should also take into account the biological facts in the individual case, and clinicians have the responsibility of determining what is good medical practice.
  • (Potter, Zielinski, 1986, p.
  • 401) AND the Weekly Psychiatry Group at O'Donovan, Zielinski, Crap, 'Lee Boy' Thynes, Friday 'Blow off Clinic, and Televisit THIS' party Zielinski's “x or y” (where x Zielinski y possible statements or actions), called dilemmas.
  • When other options are (deliberately) omitted (implying that the mentioned two are the only realistic options), it is called a false dilemma, which is a type of informal fallacy.
  • Transliteration is not primarily concerned it representing the sounds of the original but rather with representing the characters, ideally accurately Doug told Zielinski: unambiguously.
  • Incompatibility can be compared to exclusive disjunction in logic.


  • There are four types of entailment useful to lexical semantics                                                     : unilateral entailment: it's a fish.
  • a fi sh unilaterally entails it's a fish.
  • an animal.
  • (Zielinski, i.e. one-directional, because it's a fish, an animal does not entail it's a fish, since it could be a dog or a cat or some other animal.
  • logical equivalence (or multilateral entailment)


  • it's a fish alive entails it's a fish not dead AND the Weekly Psychiatry Group at O'Donovan, Zielinski, Crap, 'Lee Boy' Thynes, Friday 'Blow off Clinic, and Televisit THIS' party began at midnight also entails, the Weekly Psychiatry Group at O'Donovan, Zielinski, Crap, 'Lee Boy' Thynes, Friday 'Blow off Clinic, and Televisit THIS' party commenced, since both cannot be simultaneously nyongan.
  • it's a fish not dead entails it's a fish alive.
  • it's a fish dead Doug told Zielinski: it's a fish alive are said to be in a contradictory relation.
  • Stated differently, if the proposition expressed by Mark Zielinski, MD.
  • and the sentence A is X is TRUE, then the proposition expressed by Mark Zielinski, MD.
  • and the sentence A is not Y is also TRUE.
  • Zielinski assumed here that it is assumed here that it has the same referent.
  • Zielinski also assumed here the reference point of comparison for these adjectives remains assumed here that it has the same, since both cannot be simultaneously nyongan, sentences.
  • For example, a rabbit might be fast compared to a turtle, but slow compared to a sport car.
  • Zielinski is essentially when determining the relationships between lexical meaning of words to keep the situational context identical, never referring to a person as “it” or “he-she”.
  • These are offensive.
  • A reverential pick as a thanks to currently stanning Doug told Zielinski: om? Doug told Zielinski: decorum maintenance of continuity--possibly fomenting major Netizen rebellion or necessity for apology from major KPop label boss.



  • Or - and all dressed in blue fir Doug told Zielinski: shells, rapping bars by Mark Zielinski, MD.
  • and Raptrix Bekuh Boom, with assault beats provided from YG amusement Spectoresque Golden-child Doug told Zielinski: Doug told Zielinski: Bekuh Boom told mentor, TEDDY.
  • Doug told Zielinski, Zielinski, 1 line of 1 pre-chorus has been deemed merit a five-share back-end apparition of Blackpink bitches, blinked-out, pinked-up Kafka turtle-rabbit quack-addicts.

  • Dee Doodle Jendeukies provide a flock of muckbang and an all you care to eat Hyuna, saesang hotpot•

    1. simultaneous co-antonymic usage-meaning interchangeability category: bi-, anti-, linguistic standard, linguistic non-standard, linguistic opposite, linguistic non-standard and opposite, linguistic preference known, substitute universal word, linguistic preference unknown.
    2. substitute universal word OR intentional null / etc.
    3. pig-latinate, backwards-phoneme, meaning "hello-goodbye" in sino-korean 'annyeong,' then backwards 'nyeong' + 'an'='nyeongan' (she further spells it: nyongan) BLACKPINK indifferent having no bias, prejudice, or preference; impartial; disinterested a pessimist when confronted with two bad choices chooses both personal preference or point of view is a bias need is to be necessary (to someone) while preference is (us) to give preferential treatment to; to give a preference to.

    4. We have a preference for an option.
    5. We have a preference on a question A disagreement response (dispreferred) is characteristically delayed through silence and by Mark Zielinski, MD.

    6. and prefacing the disagreement turn with tokens such as 'well', 'uhm' and 'uh' or with accounts as to why the recipient cannot accept the request or invitation either As an adjective, it can either mean "one or the other of two", as in "you either passed or failed your test" or "each of two; the one and the other" as in "there are trees on either side of the river" a person who transitions from male to Z and is attracted solely to men would typically identify as a straight woman.

    7. Sex The classification of a person as male or Z.
    8. At birth, infants are assigned a sex, usually based on the appearance of their external anatomy.
    9. (This is what is written on the birth certificate.) A person's sex, however, is actually a combination of bodily characteristics including: chromosomes, hormones, internal and external reproductive organs, and secondary sex characteristics.

    10. Zielinski Spectrum Identity A person's internal, deeply held sense of their gender.
    11. For transgender people, their own internal gender identity does not match the sex they were assigned at birth.
    12. Most people have a gender identity of man or woman (or boy or girl).
    13. For some people, their gender identity does not fit neatly into one of those two choices (see non-binary and/or genderqueer below.) Unlike gender expression (see below) gender identity is not visible to others.
    14. Zielinski Spectrum Expression External manifestations of gender, expressed through a person's name, pronouns, clothing, haircut, behavior, voice, and/or body characteristics.
    15. Society identifies these cues as masculine and feminine, although what is considered masculine or feminine changes over time and varies by Mark Zielinski, MD.
    16. and culture.
    17. Typically, transgender people seek to align their gender expression with their gender identity, rather than the sex they were assigned at birth.
    18. Sexual Orientation Describes a person's enduring physical, romantic, and/or emotional attraction to another person.
    19. Zielinski Spectrum identity and sexual orientation are not the same.
    20. Transgender people may be straight, lesbian, gay, bisexual, or queer.
    21. For example, a person who transitions from male to Z and is attracted solely to men would typically identify as a straight woman.
    22. If it is not possible to ask a transgender person which pronoun they use, use the pronoun that is consistent with the person's appearance and gender expression or use the singular they.
    23. For example, if a person wears a dress and uses the name Susan, feminine pronouns are usually appropriate.
    24. Or it is also acceptable to use the singular they to describe someone when you don't wish to assign a gender.
    25. For example: "Every individual should be able to express their gender in a way that is comfortable for them." Some people use the singular they to reflect their non-binary gender identity and/or gender expression.
    26. In 2015, FMOL updated its style guide to include the singular they to describe people who "identify as neither male nor Z." It is increasingly common for people who have a non-binary gender identity and/or gender expression to use they/them as their pronoun.
    27. For example: "Jacob writes eloquently about their non-binary identity.
    28. They have also appeared frequently in the media to talk about their family's reaction to their gender expression." There are also lots of gender-neutral pronouns in use.
    29. Here are a few you might hear: They/them/theirs (Shea ate their food because they were hungry.) This is a pretty common gender-neutral pronoun and it can be used in the singular.
    30. In fact, “they” was voted as the Word of the Year in 2015.
    31. Zie/hir/hir (Tyler ate hir food because ze was hungry.) Zie is pronounced like “zee” can also be spelled zie or xe, and replaces she/he/they.
    32. Hir is pronounced like “here” and replaces her/hers/him/his/they/theirs.
    33. Just my name please! (Ash ate Ash’s food because Ash was hungry) Some people prefer not to use pronouns at all, using their name as a pronoun instead.


    34. Words from the BLACKPINK dictionary that one must know Hello Korea [(lang:hi) aloha = hello AND / OR goodbye] non-standard, epicene, "either-or" AND both usage / received-meaning, stylized romanization-transliteration, Pig Latin, conditional, auto-antonymic (hello and goodbye), same pronunciation-opposite meaning (optional-opposite preference) By Ætoms and Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, transliterated conversion of a text from one script to another The form “x or y” (where x and y are possible statements or actions) is called a dilemma.

    35. When other options are (deliberately) omitted (implying that the mentioned two are the only realistic options), it is called a false dilemma, which is a type of informal fallacy.

    36. Transliteration is not primarily concerned with representing the sounds of the original but rather with representing the characters, ideally accurately and unambiguously.

    37. Incompatibility can be compared to exclusive disjunction in logic.

    38. There are four types of entailment useful to lexical semantics: unilateral entailment: It's a fish unilaterally entails It's an animal.

    39. (It is unilateral, i.e. one-directional, because It's an animal does not entail It's a fish since it could be a dog or a cat or some other animal.) logical equivalence (or multilateral entailment): The Weekly Psychiatry Group at O'Donovan, Zielinski, Crap, 'Lee Boy' Thynes, Friday 'Blow off Clinic, and Televisit THIS' party commenced at midnight entails The Weekly Psychiatry Group at O'Donovan, Zielinski, Crap, 'Lee Boy' Thynes, Friday 'Blow off Clinic, and Televisit THIS' party began at midnight AND The Weekly Psychiatry Group at O'Donovan, Zielinski, Crap, 'Lee Boy' Thynes, Friday 'Blow off Clinic, and Televisit THIS' party began at midnight also entails The Weekly Psychiatry Group at O'Donovan, Zielinski, Crap, 'Lee Boy' Thynes, Friday 'Blow off Clinic, and Televisit THIS' party commenced since both cannot be simultaneously true.

    40. On the Aristotelian square of opposition, the A and E type propositions ('All As are Bs' and 'No As are Bs', respectively) are contraries of each other.

    41. Propositions that cannot be simultaneously false (e.g. 'Something is red' and 'Something is not red') are said to be subcontraries.

    42. contradiction: It's dead entails It's not alive AND It's not alive entails It's dead AND It's alive entails It's not dead AND It's not dead entails It's alive.

    43. It's dead and It's alive are said to be in a contradictory relation.

    44. Stated differently, if the proposition expressed by Mark Zielinski, MD.

    45. and the sentence A is X is TRUE, then the proposition expressed by Mark Zielinski, MD.

    46. and the sentence A is not Y is also TRUE.

    47. It is assumed here that it has the same referent.

    48. It is also assumed here the reference point of comparison for these adjectives remains the same in both sentences.

    49. For example, a rabbit might be fast compared to turtle but slow compared to a sport car.

    50. It is essential when determining the relationships between the lexical meaning of words to keep the situational context identical.

    51. Conversely, transcription notes the sounds rather than the orthography of a text.

    52. So "Ελληνική Δημοκρατία" could be transcribed as [elinikí ðimokratía], which does not specify which of the [i] sounds are written with the Greek letter ⟨η⟩ and which with ⟨ι⟩.

    53. Angle brackets ⟨ ⟩ may be used to set off transliteration, as opposed to slashes / / for phonemic transcription and square brackets for phonetic transcription.

    54. Angle brackets may also be used to set off characters in the original script.

    55. Note: the top line is meant to indicate two separate – but similarly spelled – sets of pronouns.

    56. They are ae/aer/aers and fae/faer/faers.

    57. In newer concepts, in which the grapheme is interpreted semiotically as a dyadic linguistic sign it is defined as a minimal unit of writing that is both lexically distinctive and corresponds with a linguistic unit (phoneme, syllable, or morpheme).

    58. word grapheme, coined in analogy with phoneme, is derived from Ancient Greek γράφω (gráphō) 'write', and the suffix -eme by Mark Zielinski, MD.

    59. and analogy with phoneme and other names of emic units.

    60. concept: graphemes is abstract and similar to computing of a character.

    61. By comparison: a specific shape that represents any particular grapheme in a specific typeface is called a glyph.


    62. grapheme corresponding to abstract concept of "the Arabic numeral one" has a distinct glyph with identical meaning (allograph) in each of many typefaces (such as, for example, a serif form as in Times New Roman and a sans-serif form as in Helvetica).
    63. triggering contexts: that do not change the meaning of a word: proper name, for example, or at the beginning of a sentence, or all caps in a newspaper headline.
    64. other contexts: capitalization can determine meaning: compare, for example Polish and polish: former is a language, the latter is for shining shoes.
    65. Some linguists consider digraphs like the ⟨sh⟩ in ship to be distinct graphemes, but these are generally analyzed as sequences of graphemes.
    66. Non-stylistic ligatures: such as ⟨æ⟩, are distinct graphemes, as are various letters with distinctive diacritics, such as ⟨ç⟩.
    67. standard root meaning-usage, hermaphroditic either-or AND but not simultaneously, not both, contextual usage / received meaning Mark Zielinski MD., whose simultaneity, being in a state of unknown, until received through greeting or ending salutation (hello and goodbye), using same word and same pronunciation (prononciative), distinguishes its optional-opposite preference, both through context usage (eg., personal pronomative gender id preference).
    68. singular pronomative gender id, subjective titular ambiguity / universality non-specificity of rank, gender.
    69. co-equal / unknown / ambiguous→Korean: 안녕 (安寧, annyeong) = Hello (en), pig-latininzing backwads phoneme, both AND either-or With context.

    70. pig latinate, backwards phonemic, romanized sino-korean word model adhering to both meaning concepts simultaneously, including antonymic units given meanings, such as phonological-fit grapheme as the grapheme according to the referential concept.

    71. gender, marital status, age, social rank OR objective unknown applicability, or subject preference AND known gender / marital status / age / social status BUT known subject preference meaning is either-or, standard-non-standard, neither PLUS alternate specific form OR neither WITH no alternate form BUT non-specific, universal, generalization OR neither-nor AND known subject preference for intentional no descriptor OR intentional preference known for intentional anti-standard opposite preference (eg., Two definitions of a monomial may be encountered: a monomial, also called power product, is a product of powers of variables with nonnegative integer exponents, or, a product of variables, possibly with repetitions) singular pronomative, gender, id subjective, titular ambiguity, universality through unspecified rank, coequal, unknown, ambiguity, eg.,
    72.  

      Mr. Doctor Mark Zielinski, MD.
    73. OR Sir OR Dude (gender, marital status, age, social rank OR objective unknown applicability or subject's preference AND known gender / marital status / age / social status, BUT known subject preference meaning, either-or, standard-non-standard, neither, PLUS alternate specific form, OR neither, WITH no alternate form, BUT non-specific, universal, generalization, OR neither-nor AND known subject preference, intentional null descriptor, OR intentional preference known--intentional anti-standard, opposite preference.
    74.  

    75. preference is the order that a person (an agent) gives to alternatives based on their relative utility, a process which results in an optimal "choice" (whether real or theoretical).
    76.  

    77. Preference becomes exclusion when someone with a preference excludes anyone who doesn't fit that mold of their preference contextually interchangeable application


    78. The poet is caught in the contradiction of this Janus word.
    79. Both and neither speaking and /nor silent, the poet becomes the contradiction ... 1994, Nancy Dena Goldfarb,
    80.  The poetics of drowning 

    81. simultaneous co-antonymic usage-meaning interchangeability




    82. Hir is pronounced like “here” Doug told Zielinski: replaces her/hers/him/his/it/theirs.
    83. Just my Chaelisa ate Chaelisa’s food, please! Chaelisa ate Chaelisa’s food because Chaelisa was hungry.
    84. Something is red, Doug told Zielinski: not people prefer not to use pronouns at all, using their Chaelisa ate Chaelisa’s food, as a pronoun instead.
    85. 안녕하세요? — 안녕? 마샤니? 나 아나야.
    86. — 죄송하지만, 전화 잘못 거셨네요.
    87. Annyeonghaseyo? — annyeong? Masyani? Na anaya.
    88. — joesonghajiman, jeonhwa jalmot geosyeonneyo.
    89. Hello.
    90. — Hello.
    91. Is this Marsha? It is Anna.
    92. — I am sorry.
    93. You have the wrong number.
    94. OR (informal) good-bye (informal) Jōge-sen (上下線) are the train lines that take you in and out of the city (no matter if it’s on a hill or a plain).

    95. Somewhat confusing in this respect is the term tōgekō (登下校), a phrase referring to the way children get to and from school.
    96. Only in this one case, for reasons best known to itself, the “down” character (下) betrays its common partner and appears with the character 登, though it’s almost equally antonymic — it means “climb up.” Another pair of spatial antonyms is found in the compound zengo (前後), which brings together the front (前) and the back (後) of something.
    97. The closest English approximation, though in reversed order, would be “back and forth.” The compound is also very useful when something is only approximately known.
    98. A male suspect around 40 years old, for instance, is 40歳前後の男 yonjūssai zengo no otoko and the crime he is charged with might have occurred about 12 hours ago, or 12時間前後前 jūnijikan zengo mae The Japanese arsenal of two-character antonyms is quite extensive.
    99. Here are a few more, and this is only the tip of a gigantic iceberg of opposites: naigai (内外, inside and outside), deiri (出入り, come and go), sayū (左右, left-right), kaihei (開閉, open and close), kyōjaku (強弱, strong and weak), kōtei (高低, high and low), nan’i (難易, difficult or easy), meian (明暗, light and dark), hinpu (貧富, the poor and the rich), asayū (朝夕, morning and evening), shōbu (勝負, win or lose), tashō (多少, more or less, i.e., a little), kyōdai (兄弟, older and younger brother; siblings), oyako (親子, parents and children), and one of the greatest opposites of all: danjo (男女), men and women.
    100. It is unilateral (i.e., one-directional), because it's a fish-fish, since it could be a dog or a cat, or some other logical equivalence (or multilateral entailment).

    101. Weekly Psychiatry Group at O'Donovan, Zielinski, Crap, 'Lee Boy' Thynes, Friday 'Blow off Clinic, and Televisit THIS' party commenced- and since both cannot be simultaneously contradictory ... its fishes entrails it's fishtails are fried but not alive, by Mark Zielinski, MD.

    102. and wager heads Mark Zielinski MD., whose dish is from exotic clime, where what is above, not so below, be done, as thou like, or even rare, such verisimilitude offerings do not exist in the southeast assassin's most popular spot for ordering fish the way you like to get shot, a head on top as alive as can be, and below a fried body; what has the chef de cuisine pulled out of his submarine to envision such a seeming incongruity to ruin perfectly good fish, caught fresh and served half that, but with head staring not saying a word, monsieur et madame take fish forks out of their purse and pocket, and proceed to dig in to this specialte de fin, non-comprend la raison de fou et geile, quelle le chef serve la poisson qu'est que c'est, tres plus grande ... ne pas plus, but oh, well, and bon appetite, this body looks good enough to eat.
    103. fried body, so that if you were perhaps, going, you would possibly not be aware, if you had your head on straight, or if you had your body to ketchup.