POO BUNNY ENGLISH
Also referred to as “Bunny English” or “PBE,” Poo Bunny English is a dialect of American English. Blunnies around the world have been cultivating their own dialects of their native languages, and North American blunnies are no different.
Poo bunnies often swap out various syllables for different ones. Examples include, but are not limited to:
- L or R sounds becoming W sounds
- “Ml-” being the prefix for any and all words, depending on the strength of the blunny’s accent.
- “-f” being the suffix for the majority of words ending with “-th,” for specific blunnies.
- “-p“ or “b“ replacing “-t“ as the last letter of words.
Poo bunnies have also been cultivating an entire new vocabulary. Here is a non-exhaustive list of any and all words these little rodents have invented.
- Mlan-Mlan/Mlan (noun. child)
- Wumlan (noun. sibling)
- Wumo (noun. mom/mother)
- Wimwo (noun. dad/father)
- Pawet (noun. parent; formal)
- Meep/Meef (noun. frequent exclamation; means nothing in particular)
- Mupo/Moopo (noun. store/market)
- Webbit (noun. blunnies who surf the web; computer nerds)
- Wabbit (noun. scientist blunnies)
- Mloat (adj. fat)
- Mlean/Mleen (adj. thin)
- Wadadawa (rich blunny/large sum of money)
- Muln Mleuf (?)
- Muln Mlat (?)
- Power Roleplay (v/n. to kill; death, dead; dying.)
- Sossi (noun. street, avenue.
- Buln/Bulney (noun. bunny)
- Blunny (noun. bunny. specifically inclusive of pee bunnies.)
- Mwo/Mwobe