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Anonymous
>>330739 The hurt look on her face after he slaps the ciggarette out of her mouth makes me weep. Its so heart wrenchingly full of melancholy anguish it makes me want to cut myself.
But, is she actually smoking? It does not seem lit nor does she seem to actually inhale or exhale any smoke. Though that is explainable, it only supports my question weakly at best.
And lastly, it would have been verbally correct to say she expels the smoke, but inpel does not have a opposite meaning, nor is it a word, so what is the base of the word expel? Well, clearly it is from the word pelled which has Latin or more broadly Proto-Indo European roots and simply means "To force". So, using simple english rules for the construction of words, or format rather, we could easily infer that inpel means to force in. Such as, "I inpelled the criminal into his cell". But no, you would be wrong using the word in that manner. My treatise is finished. Grazie.
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