Exponentially. Also...
Please change your tampons before your next post.
Geeze, it's not my fault you have the palete of a 14 year old girl. Get outta here with that dollar store food, haha.
Damn. You can spell palate at least 3 different ways, and you still managed to not hit any of the correct versions.
I think most 14 year old girls wouldn't even be able to pull that off. 
Actually...
https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/palate#Middle_EnglishIt is a word, albeit in what is referred to as "Middle English" (i.e., the English language from c. 1150 to c. 1470). Blame the

teaching of my beloved mother and my friend Reeves for what passes for phraseology.
phra·se·ol·o·gy
/ˌfrāzēˈäləjē/
Learn to pronounce
noun: phraseology; plural noun: phraseologies
A mode of expression, especially one characteristic of a particular speaker or writer.So then, neither of you is "wrong" but one of you is an asshole. Let us see who that is. Who knows, mayhap we will get another thread from said odlid ("dildo" backwards and not Middle English) about what a meanie I can be. Here to not be an ass but rather to assist. Just because the word "ass" is a part of "assist" does not mean...Oh intercourse that, Allie. You're not a bad guy, you just type that way.
I sometimes actually enjoy your culinary threads. Really.

Yeah. A play on a quote from the "Who Framed Roger Rabbit" flick. I trust you understood it. Do not go there for in truth you would drown.
And yes, "mayhap" is also Middle English in origin:
If "mayhap" looks to you like a relative of its synonym "perhaps," you're right - the words are related. Both ultimately derive from the Middle English noun hap, meaning "chance" or "fortune." "Mayhap" was formed by combining the phrase "(it) may hap" into a single word.SOMEPARTS...Well written, sir.

Al Doggity...Nice try.
