Looks like there isn't a y, so z is zither.
Hmm, how 'bout foreign phrases known to most people? Please translate if you think it might be a lil obscure.
Adios, muchachos! Later, kids!
eau de vivre (water of life)
fait accompli - an action which cannot be undone - an accomplished fact
hoi polloi --the common folk
Ipso facto - By the very fact
joie de vivre (means "I'm a big chucklehead cheese eating surrender monkey ....and gay" in French)
Kyuukei suru. (Japanese-take a rest)
l'tired.
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Some pop culture, 'net cartoon in which the world is blown up, except for California.
The French refuse to fight, saying they're "l'tired". It has caught on in high schools. Everyone is l'tired.
OK, le tired.
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I am le tired.
From the guys that brought you BANG BANG BANG! and Mario Twins, comes a hilarious new cartoon called End of the World. This is the funniest stuff I've ever seen, idioht. I'm going to go hang out with California and Hawaii
Alaska can come too.
Enjoy Schfifty Five as well.
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(Just so you don't think I made it up...)
Michi ni mayou. (Japanese-get lost)
non compos mentis
ADJECTIVE: Law. Afflicted with or exhibiting irrationality and mental unsoundness: brainsick, crazy, daft, demented, disordered, distraught, dotty, insane, lunatic, mad, maniac, maniacal, mentally ill, moonstruck, off, touched, unbalanced, unsound, wrong. Informal : bonkers, cracked, daffy, gaga, loony. Slang : bananas, batty, buggy, cuckoo, fruity, loco, nuts, nutty, screwy, wacky. Chiefly British : crackers. Idioms: around the bend, crazy as a loon, mad as a hatter, not all there, nutty as a fruitcake, off (or out of) one's head, off one's rocker, of unsound mind, out of one's mind, sick in the head, stark raving mad.
Por Favor (spanish-please)