boogers in A Sentence

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    Why would I wipe my Boogers on it?

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    2

    Why do we have snot and Boogers.

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    3

    Without Boogers in it this time.

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    4

    What will we find? Boogers or Nazi gold?

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    5

    Mucus, or Boogers, is a naturally protective part of your body.

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    6

    Mom, did you have to fly out through all those Boogers?

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    7

    But if you do use it, don't wipe your Boogers on it.

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    8

    What people do know is that eating Boogers isn't usually considered a socially acceptable behavior.

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    9

    Another name that comes up whenever the subject of eating Boogers is mentioned is lung specialist Dr. Friedrich Bischinger.

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    10

    Does physically taking Boogers out of your nose, putting them in your mouth and swallowing boost your immune system?

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    11

    In the end credits of Frozen, there is a disclaimer about Kristoff's assertion that all men eat their own Boogers.

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    12

    You know, lots of kids are really into gross things, like playing in dirt or collecting beetles or eating their Boogers.

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    13

    First, a habit can become so normal to a person they may not even realize they're picking their nose and eating their Boogers.

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    14

    He also suggested that the reason Boogers have a sugary taste is to entice children to eat them, thus helping bolster their immune systems… It's evolution.

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    15

    Picking their nose and eating the Boogers, then touching other household objects and other people's skin could potentially increase the risks for spreading viruses and bacteria, such as the flu or a common cold.

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    16

    However, as you sleep, you obviously don't blink so the meibomian secretions and other components of the gound tend to gather in the corners of your eyes, as well as along your eye lines and dries out, creating hard yellow-ish“eye Boogers”.

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    17

    One of the more credible sounding proponents of the habit is Scott Napper, a professor of biochemistry who made waves around the world's media outlets in 2013 when he half-heartedly proposed to a group of his students that eating one's Boogers allows our bodies to safely develop anti-bodies to the weakened pathogens present in…(more).

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    18

    One of the more credible sounding proponents of the habit is Scott Napper, a professor of biochemistry who made waves around the world's media outlets in 2013 when he half-heartedly proposed to a group of his students that eating one's Boogers allows our bodies to safely develop anti-bodies to the weakened pathogens present in our snot and noses.

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