I think I'm beginning to understand the problem here. Not only are you incapable of using syntax, grammar, spelling or punctuation correctly, you apparently don't understand sentences that do.
I didn't call the names in your posts "window dressing." Here's what I posted:
Given the duplicitous nature of most of them, it's more like cross-dressing.
Before your attempt your next response, please have someone tell you what the words mean.
You then responded,
some may have been duplicates but not most, but I can still give you more names if you like?
I see you didn't take my advice.
LOL!
gumlegs: Given the duplicitous nature of most of them, it's more like cross-dressing.[...] Before your attempt your next response, please have someone tell you what the words mean.
sleeper: some may have been duplicates but not most, but I can still give you more names if you like?
gumlegs: I see you didn't take my advice.
It may be a little bit too late, but, as it is said: Be not ignorant of any thing in a great matter or a small.
(Sir.5,15)
duplicitous:
- Adjective
- Marked by deliberate deceptiveness especially by pretending one set of feelings and acting under the influence of another; "she was a deceitful scheming little thing"- Israel Zangwill; "a double-dealing double agent"; "a double-faced infernal traitor and schemer"- W.M.Thackeray.
duplicate:
- Adjective
- Identically copied from an original; "a duplicate key".
- Being two identical.
- Noun
- Something additional of the same kind; " he always carried extras in case of an emergency".
- A copy that corresponds to an original exactly; "he made a duplicate for the files".
- Verb
- Make or do or perform again; "He could never replicate his brilliant performance of the magic trick".
- Duplicate or match; "The polished surface twinned his face and chest in reverse".
- Make a duplicate or duplicates of; "Could you please duplicate this letter for me?".
- Increase twofold; "The population doubled within 50 years".