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Super Quick Icebreaker Questions

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
79 views42 pages

Super Quick Icebreaker Questions

Uploaded by

Nagaraju P
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Super quick icebreaker questions

Have an extra minute or two? These thought-provoking questions make


fantastic, fun icebreakers.

QUESTIONS WITH PURPOSE


Make people think, get conversations started, and warm up before tough
brainstorming sessions.

1. What would be the title of your autobiography?

 Theme: Summarizing complex events or concepts.


 Purpose: Preparing for activities like crafting a vision
statement.

2. If you were a superhero, what would you call yourself?

 Theme: Naming stuff is hard!


 Purpose: Practicing packing a lot of info into a single,
evocative word or phrase. This is a killer icebreaker for
marketing teams!

3. Who was your first mentor, and what qualities made them a good (or
lousy) one?

 Theme: Teamwork and support are important.


 Purpose: Reinforcing the idea that relying on each other is
part of growth. Use this icebreaker for projects or teams
with lots of dependencies, and during leadership meetings.

4. Have you ever called customer service to complain? What happened?

 Theme: Empathizing with customers.


 Purpose: Putting everyone into an empathetic state of
mind before discussing trade-offs or designing a new user
experience.

5. What's one thing you learned from a project that went wrong?

 Theme: Failures are learning opportunities


 Purpose: Focusing on risk identification and mitigation.

JUST-FOR-FUN QUESTIONS
Spark conversation, especially in less formal meetings. You can also print
and assemble one of our dicebreakers for a little extra fun.
 What animal would you choose to be, and why?

 What's the last dream you remember?


 How do you let teammates know you're in deep work
mode?
 Where would you vacation if money were no object?
 What are your favorite books, magazines, or podcasts?
 What car did you use to learn how to drive?
 What's one thing you're grateful for today?
 When you read or watch TV, do you go for fiction or non-
fiction?
 Do you prefer coffee, tea, or soda?
 Can you remember a bumper sticker that made you smile?

FILL IN THE BLANKS


Get to know new coworkers or teammates.

I have never ________________.

My friends love me for my ________________.

If my pet could talk, it would say ________________.

One ____________ is better than ten ________________.


Icebreaker activities for meetings, offsites, and more
Loosen up and get engaged with these fun icebreakers for meetings.

Exorcize the demons 10 MIN


Juice up your neural pathways before brainstorming or problem-solving,
and have a few belly laughs. Best for groups of three or more.

1. Introduce the topic you'll be brainstorming about, or the


problem you'll be trying to solve.
2. Using a whiteboard or butcher paper — or, for remote
teams, a digital collaboration tool — ask the group to write
down their worst ideas.
3. After a few minutes, step back and take 'em all in (we dare
you not to fall on the floor laughing!).

4. (Optional) Ask each person to share their favorite worst idea


and why it stood out to them.

This exercise helps teams resist the (often strong) temptation to self-
censor when real problem-solving begins. After you’ve heard the worst
ideas and flushed them out of your system, you can proceed with your
regularly scheduled brainstorming.
Mystery person group sort 15-30 MIN
Kickstart creative thinking and see different thought processes in
action. Best for large groups of 20 or more.

1. Each person writes a surprising fact about themselves on an


index card and drops their cards into a bag, box, or hat.

2. Each person chooses a card at random from the bag.

3. Now the fun begins. Participants stand up and mingle, with


the goal of finding cards that align with a theme or are of a
similar type. Keep an open mind when thinking about what
constitutes the common thread between cards. The thread
could be daredevil tendencies, origin stories, music, or
anything else. There's no limit to how big each grouping can
be, but you must find groupings that accommodate all the
cards — nobody gets left out.

4. Each group reads their cards and shares the theme they
identified.

5. (Optional) Invite everyone to stand up and re-sort


themselves. Some groupings will likely stay the same, while
others might be dramatically different.

Notice how the point of the exercise was not to figure out which fact goes
with which person? That's on purpose. In fact, remember to let
participants know this at the beginning of the exercise in order to stave
off any anxieties.
Telephone charades 15 MIN
Warm up for a day of listening with this non-verbal activity. Best for
groups of 10 or more.

1. Divide into teams of five to eight people.


2. Ask one team to come to the front of the room and stand in
a line, one behind the other, all facing the same direction
(it's important no one can see the person standing behind
them).

3. Show the person at the back of the line a word to act out
silently, but don't have them do so just yet. Show the word
to the audience as well so they know what's up, but make
sure nobody else in the line sees it.

4. When the person at the back of the line is ready, they tap
the shoulder of the person standing in front of them. That
person turns around and faces the person who knows the
word.

5. The actor pantomimes the word as best they can two or


three times so the person watching can really absorb and
memorize the movements. Do not let anyone say the word
being acted out!

6. The person watching then becomes the actor – they tap the
person in front of them and repeat the pantomime as best
they can. (You see where this is going, right?)

7. Repeat steps four to six until everyone in the line has seen
the pantomime.

8. Laugh as the pantomime morphs dramatically from the


original.

9. The person at the front of the line tries to guess the original
word. If they get it right, the team scores a point. It’s up to
you how strict you want to be!

Make sure each team gets a chance to act. You can continue as long as
you like. Here are some example words your teams can act out: mermaid,
lawn sprinkler, firefighter, Gollum, light bulb, snow shovel, jet ski, surfer,
walkie-talkie, or frying pan.
Three things 5-10 MIN
Trigger quick, unfiltered thinking before a brainstorming session with this
fast-paced activity. Best for groups of five or more.

1. Circle up and choose a person to kick things off – we'll call


them Person A.
2. Person A turns to the person next to them, person B, and
names a category, like "types of sandwiches.”

3. Person B rattles off three things that fit into that category as
fast as they can. No judgment and no self-censoring!

4. When they're done, the entire group claps and yells, "Three
things!"

5. Go around the circle until everyone has had a chance to


name a category and three things.

The point isn't to make sure all things named fit the category perfectly, or
to come up with the wittiest response. The point is to laugh and have fun.
Let your brain relax so your neurons can fire quickly. Celebrate even the
oddest contributions and you’ll set an anything-goes tone before diving
into more cerebral, strategic activities.
[Link]
students/

Language Play

Afrikaans Goeiemiddag.

Albanian Mirëdita.

Arabic ‫يومك سعيد‬.

yawmuk saeid.
Arabic (Egyptian) ‫مساء الخير‬

masa’ alkhayr

Armenian Բարի օր

Bari or

Bengali শুভ বিকেল।

Śubha bikēla.

Bosnian Dobar dan.

Cantonese 午安

ng5 ngon1
Catalan Bona tarda.

Chinese 下午好

Xiàwǔ hǎo

Chinese (Taiwan) 午安

Wǔ ān

ㄨˇ ㄢ

>> Download our app and listen to the pronunciation.

Croatian Dobar dan.

Czech Dobré odpoledne.


Danish God eftermiddag.

Dutch Goede middag.

English (American) Good afternoon.

English (British) Good afternoon.

Esperanto Bonan posttagmezon.

Finnish Hyvää päivää.

French Bonne après midi.

German Guten Tag.

>> Download our app and listen to the pronunciation.


Greek Καλό απόγευμα.

Kaló apógevma.

Haitian Creole Bòn apremidi.

Hakka ng3 on2 / siid5 bau1 zu5

午安 / 食飽晝吂

Hindi नमस्कार।

namaskaar.

Hungarian Jó napot!

Icelandic Góðan dag.


Indonesian Selamat siang.

Italian Buon pomeriggio.

Japanese こんにちは

konnichiwa

Korean 좋은 오후입니다

joheun ohuibnida

>> Download our app and listen to the pronunciation.

Latin Bonam diem!

Latvian Labdien!
Macedonian Добро попладне.

Dobro popladne.

Norwegian God ettermiddag.

Polish Dzień dobry.

Portuguese (Brazil) Boa tarde.

Portuguese (Portugal) Boa tarde.

Romanian Bună ziua.

Russian Добрый день.

Dobryy den’.
Serbian Dobar dan.

>> Download our app and listen to the pronunciation.

Slovak Dobré popoludnie.

Spanish (Latin America) Buenas tardes.

Spanish (Spain) Buenas tardes.

Swahili Habari za alasiri.

Swedish God eftermiddag.

Taiwanese (MinNan) Ngóo-an.

午安
Tamil மதிய வணக்கம்.

Matiya vaṇakkam.

Thai สวัสดี

s̄wạs̄dī

Turkish Tünaydın.

Vietnamese Chào buổi chiều.

Welsh Prynhawn da.

>> Download our app and listen to the pronunciation.

Language Evening greetings

Adyghe Уипчыхьэ шІу

Afrikaans Goeienaand
Albanian (Gheg) Mir-mrãma
Albanian (Tosk) Mirëmbrëma

Aleut Amgiichxizax̂

Јакшылыкту эҥирле (Ĵakšılıktu eñirle)


Altay
Јакшы эҥир (Ĵakšı eñir)

Aklan Mayad nga gabi-i

Güeter Owa
Güete Obe
Alsatian
A güata-n-owa
A göte-n-owwe.
አንደምን አመሸህ?
(əndämən amäššäh?) >m
ምሽቱን እንዴት አሳለፍከው?
(məššətun əndet asalläfkäw?) >m
አንደምን አመሸሽ?
Amharic (əndämən amäššäš?) >f
ምሽቱን እንዴት አሳለፍሽው?
(məššətun əndet asalläfšəw?) >f
አንደምን አመሹ?
(əndämən amäššu?) frm
[how did you spend the evening?]
Arabic (misa' il khayr) ‫مساء الخير‬
(Egyptian) response - (misa' in noor) ‫مساء الّنور‬
Arabic
Masa el khayr
(Lebanese)
Arabic
(masā' al-khayr) ‫مساء الخير‬
(Modern Standard)
Arabic
(mselkḥīr) ‫مساء الخير‬
(Moroccan)

Aragonese Buena nueit

Armenian
Բարի' երեկո: (Bari yereko)
(Eastern)
Armenian Բարի իրիկուն:
(Western) (Paree eereegoon)
Assamese শুভ গধূলি (xubhô gôdhuli)

Asturian Bona nueche

Azerbaijani Axşamınız xeyir

Balinese Rahajeng peteng, ᬭᬳᬚᭂᬂᬧᭂᬢᭂᬂ

I ni wula (sg)
Bambara
Aw ni wula (pl)
хәйерле кис
Bashkir
(xäyyerlye kis)
Basque Arratsalde on

Bavarian Guadn åmd

Belarusian Добры вечар (Dobry večar)


Chungulopo mukwai
Bemba
Eya mukwai (reply)
Bengali শুভ সন্ধ্যা (Shubhô sôndhya)

Bhojpuri राम राम (raam raam)

Marhay na banggi
Bikol Dyos marhay na banggi
Marhay na pagkabanggí

Bislama Gudnaet

Blaan Fyē kifu

Bosnian Dobro večer

Breton Nozvezh vat

Bulgarian Добър вечер (Dobãr večer)

Burmese မဂႆလာပၝ (min-ga-la-ba)

Catalan Bona nit


Cebuano Maayong Gabii
Kopisanangan doungosodop
Central Dusun
Osonong sosodopon
Chabacano de Cavite Buenas noches

Chabacano de Zamboanga Buenas noches

Chamorro Buenas noches


(Guam dialect)
Chamorro Buenas noches
(North Marianas dialect)
Суьйре дика йойла (Süyre dika yoyla)
Chechen Суьйре дика хуьлда хьан (Süyre dika xülda ẋan) - sg
Суьйре дика хуьлда шун (Süyre dika xülda şun) - pl
ᎣᏍᏓ ᏒᎯᏰ (Osda svhiye)
Cherokee
ᎣᏍᏓ ᏒᎯᏰᏱ (Osda svhiyeyi)
Mwachoma bwanji
Chichewa
Ndachoma bwino (reply)
Chinese 晚安 (máahn ōn)
(Cantonese) 晚上好 (máahnseuhng hóu)
Chinese 食夜沒? (siit8ia5mut8?)
(Hakka) 晚安 (van3on1)
Chinese 晚安 (wǎn'ān)
(Mandarin) 晚上好 (wǎnshànghǎo)
Chinese 夜里好 (yà lī hō)
(Shanghainese) 夜里相好 (yà lī xiāng hō)
Chinese 暗安 (àm-an)
(Taiwanese) 晚安 (bóan-an)
Horélyą náheɁą
Chipewyan
Nánést’į nįndé nesdhen

Chuukese Nekkunion annim

Chuvash Ыра каш пултӑр (Yra kaš pultăr)

Cimbrian Guuten aabend!

Coastal Kadazan Kopivosian minsosodopon


Cornish Gorthugher da
Corsican (À) bona sera
Croatian Dobra večer

Cuyonon Mayad nga gabi

Czech Dobrý večer


Danish God aften
Dari (Cast baxir) ‫چست بخير‬
Idhi nade? (How is your evening?)
Adhi ma ber (My evening is going well - reply)
Owimore? (How is the evening?)
Dholuo
Owimore ahinya (The evening is going well - reply)
Oyimore (It [the sky] has closed itself -sg)
Oyimore ahinya (reply - pl)
Goedenavond
Dutch
Goeienavond
ཕྱི་རུ་བདེེ་ལེགས།
Dzongkha
(Chiru delek)
Mọkọm
Efik
Ekọm do

Elfdalian Gukweld

Estonian Tere õhtust


Fiɛyi
Ewe
Fiɛyi na mi
Buena(s) tardi(s)
Extremaduran
Alas buenas tardis

Faroese Gott kvøld

Bula
Fijian
Ni sa Bula
Hyvää iltaa
Finnish
Iltaa
Flemish (West) Goeije 'n avend
French Bonsoir

Frisian (North - Mooring) Gudeen

Frisian (Saterland) Nacht


Frisian (West) Goeie jûn

Friulian Buine sere

Boa tarde
Galician Boas tardes
Bo serán

Garifuna Buiti raaban weyu

Bona nueit
Gascon
Bona nuèit

Georgian საღამო მშვიდობისა (saghamo mshvidobisa)

German Guten Abend


Χαῖρε! (Khaíre!)
Greek (Ancient)
Χαίρετε! (Khaírete!)
Καλησπέρα (Kalispéra) - when arriving
Greek (Modern)
Καλό βράδυ (Kaló bradi) - when leaving

Greenlandic Inuugujaq

Gujarati શુભ સંધ્યા (shubh sandhya) - archaic


Haitian Creole Bonswa
Hausa Barka da yamma
Hawaiian Aloha ahiahi
Hebrew (Erev tov) ‫ערב טוב‬
Wa tokerwa
Herero Wa tokerwa nawa? (sg)
Mwa tokerwa nawa (pl)
Ma-ayong Hapon
Hiligaynon
Ma-ayong gab-i
नमस्ते (namaste)
Hindi
शुभ सन्ध्या (śubh sandhyā) - rarely used
Nyob zoo (common any time of day)
Hmong (White) Nyob zoo yav tsaus ntuj os (not common)
Nyob zoo thaum yav tsaus ntuj (not common)
Hungarian Jó estét (kívánok)

Iban Selamat lamai (2-7pm)

Góða kvöldið
Icelandic
Gott kvöld
Ndeewo
Igbo
Ndewo (reply)

Iloko Naimbag a sardam

Inari Saami Pyeri eehid

Selamat sore (late afternoon/evening)


Indonesian
Selamat malam (late evening/night)

Inuktitut ᐅᓐᓄᓴᒃᑯᑦ (Unnuhatkut/Unnusakkut)

Unnusatkun
Iñupiaq
Anaqaksralluataq
Tráthnóna maith duit (sg)
Irish (Gaelic)
Tráthnóna maith daoibh (pl)
Italian Buonasera
Gud evening
Jamaican
Gud evenling
Japanese 今晩は / こんばんは (konbanwa)
ꦱꦸꦒꦼꦁꦱꦺꦴꦤ꧀ꦠꦼꦤ꧀
Javanese
(Sugeng sọnten)

Jenesch Voscha buik

Jèrriais Bônsouair

Kabiye Ñánà ɖánaɣ

Mselkhir
Kabyle
Mselkhir d lhafiya (reply)

Kalmyk Сән хонтн! (Sän xontn)

Kannada ಶುಭ ಸಾಯಂಕಾಲ (shubha sāyankāla)


Kaqchikel Xqa q'ij
Xqa q'ij nan (said to older females)
Xqa q'ij tat (said to older males)
Dobri wieczór
Kashubian
Dobri wieczórk
Қайырлы кеш! (Qayrli kesh!)
Kazakh
Кеш жарық! (Kesh zharyq!)

Khmer សាយ័ណ្ហសួស្ដី (sayôn suŏ sdei)

Khoekhoe (Nama) !Gâi !oes.

Kinyarwanda Mwiriwe neza

안녕하십니까 (annyeong hashimnikka)


Korean
좋은 저녁 (joheun jeonyeok)
Геч яхшы болсун
(Geç yaхşı bolsun)
Kumyk
Сав бол (Saw bol - reply)
Сав болугъуз (Saw boluğuz - reply)
Evarbash, evara te bi xér (sg)
Kurdish (Kurmanji)
Evarbash, evara we bi xér (pl)

Kurdish (Sorani) Êware baş

Kven Hyvvää iltaa

Kyrgyz Кайырлуу кеч! (Kayryluu kech!)

(Buenas tardes) ‫בוינאס טארדיס‬


Ladino
(Buena tadrada) ‫בוינא טאדראדא‬
ສະບາຍດີຍາມແລງ (sabaidee yarm laeng)
Lao
ສະບາຍດີ (sabaidee)
Latgalian Lobs vokors

Latin Bonum Vesper!


Latvian Labvakar

Laz კაი ლიმჯი (Ǩai limci)

Limburgish Gojenaovend

Lingala Mbote
Lithuanian Labas vakaras

Livvi-Karelian Hyviä ildua

Low Saxon (Goden) Avend

Lozi Lobala ka kozo

Osiibye otya nno? (How was your day?)


Luganda
Bulungi, osiibye otya nno? (reply)

Lule Sámi Buorre iehket

Luxembourgish Gudden Owend


Macedonian Добра вечер (Dobra večer)
Shubh sandhya
Maithili
Sanjhek pranaam.

Malagasy Manao ahoana e

Malay Selamat petang (2-7pm)


Malayalam ശുഭസന്ധ്യ (śubh sandhya)
Maldivian (Ba'ajjeveri haveereh) ‫ަބްއައޖެޖުވިރ ަހީވެރްހ‬
Bonswa
Maltese
Il-lejla t-tajba

Mam Qa’lte

Manx (Gaelic) Fastyr mie

Māori Kia ora

Marathi शुभ-संध्या (shubh-sandhyā)

Marshallese Io̧ kwe in jota

Mauritian Creole Bonswar

Monégasque Bona sera

Mongolian Оройн мэнд (Oroin mend)

Mossi Ne y zaabre

Nahuatl Cualli teotlac


Cualli tiotaqui
Tiotaqui
¿Quen oteotlahquililo? (How was the dusqu?)

Nauruan Omo yemero

Yá'át'ééh ałní'íní
Navajo
Yáʼátʼééh iʼííʼą́
Nkore Osiibire ota? (How was your day?)

Ndebele (Northern - Zimbabwe) Litshonile

Litshone njani
Utshone njani? (How have you spent your day?)
Ndebele (Southern)
- said only to sb you've seen in the morning
Ngitshonile (reply)
Nepali शुभ सन्ध्या (śubha sandhyā)

Nogai Кеш яхшы болсын

Buorre eahket
Northern Sámi
Ipmel atti (reply)
Dumêlang
Northern Sotho
Fonaneng
Norwegian God kveld
Occitan Bonser
Ojibwe Mino dibikad ("It's a good night")

Oʼodham Skeg hudñig

Oriya ସୁଭସନ୍ଧ୍ୟା (Subha sandhẏā)


Wa tokelwa po? (sg)
Oshiwambo Mwa tokelwa po? (pl)
Owa tokelwa po nawa?

Ossetian Дæ уæ изæр хорз (Dæ uæ izær xorz)

Palauan Ungil Kebsengei

Papiamento Bon nochi


(maakhaam mo pa kheyr) ‫ماښام مو په خير‬
Pashto
(khah maakhaam) ‫ماشام شه‬
Pennsylvania German / Dutch Gut'n Owed
Guder Owet/Owed

Picard Bonsoèr

Pohnpeian Soutik mwahu

Dobry wieczór
Polish
Miłego wieczoru - (used when leaving)
Portuguese Boa tarde

Quechua Wuynas nuchis

Rapa Nui 'Iorana

Romanian Bună seara


Buna sera
Romansh
Buna saira
Russian Добрый вечер! (Dobryy vecher!)

Rusyn Добрый вечӱр (Dobryj večür)

Sakha Үтүө киэһэнэн (ytyø kiehenen)

Samoan Manuia le afiafi

Lab vakar
Samogitian
Laba vakara

Sango Balaô

Bona sera
Sardinian (Logudorese)
Bona sero
Scots Guid evenin

Scottish Gaelic Feasgar math

Serbian Добро вече (Dobro veče)

Sesotho Fonane (sg) Fonaneng (pl)

Sicilian Bona sira

Manheru
Shona
Maswera sei (reply)

Sindhi Sham jo salam


Sinhala සුභ සැන්දෑවක් (subha sandhavak)
Slovak Dobrý večer
Slovenian Dober večer

Solresol Misi

Somali Fiid wanaagsan

Sorbian (Lower) Dobry wjacor

Sorbian (Upper) Dobry wječor

Southern Sámi Buerie iehkede

Buenas tardes
Spanish
Buenas noches

Stellingwarfs Goeienaovend

Sundanese Wilujeng wengi


Swahili Habari ya jioni

Swazi Lishonile sihlobo sami

Swedish God kväll

Swiss German Gueten Oobe

Magandang gabi po (frm)


Tagalog
Magandang gabi (inf)

Tahitian 'Ia ora oe i teie po

Tajik Шаб ба хайр (Šab ba xajr)

மாலை வணக்கம்
Tamil (formal)
(maalai vanakkam) [ml] [fm]

Tatar Xäyerle kiç

నమస్కారం (namaskārām) - frm


Telugu
నమస్తే (namaste) - inf
Bonoite
Tetum Kalan diak
Boasnoite
สวัสดีครับ (sà-wàt-dee kráp) - m
Thai
สวัสดีค่ะ (sà-wàt-dee kâ) - f

Tibetan དགོང་དྲོ་བདེ་ལེགས། (gong-to de-lek)

ከመይ ኣምሲኻ (kemey Amsika) m/sg


ከመይ ኣምሲኺ (kemey Amsiki) f/sg
Tigrinya
ከመይ ኣምሲኹም (kemey Amsikum) m/pl/frm
ከመይ ኣምሲኽን (kemey Amsikn) f/pl/frm

Tokelauan Afiafi

Apinum
Tok Pisin
Gut nait

Tongan Mālō tau ma‘u e efiafi ni

Riperile (sg)
Tsonga
Imadyambu

Tsotsil Mi li'ote

Tswana Muitsibowa a a monate

Turkish İyi akşamlar

Turkmen Agşamyňyz haýyrly bolsun

Me ma wo adwo
Maadwo
Twi Yaa agya (reply - to an elderly man)
Yaa ɛna (reply - to an elderly woman)
Yaa anua (reply - to a sibling age mate or colleague)

Udmurt Ӟеч ӝыт (Dźeč džyt)

Ukrainian Доброго вечора (Dobroho večora)


Urdu (roz bākhair) ‫روز بخير‬
Uyghur (Häyirlik käch) ‫خەيىرلىك كەچ‬
Uzbek Hayirli kech
Ndi madekwana
Venda
Ndi madekwana avhudi (reply)
Venetian Bona sera
Veps Hüväd ehtad
Vietnamese Chào buổi tối
Võro Tere õdagust

Walloon Bonswêr

Wayuu Aliika

Welsh Noswaith dda

Westrobothnian Gow kwell

Wolof Naka ngon si

Wymsorys Güter öwyt

Molo (sg)
Xhosa
Molweni (pl)

Yapese Fal'e baleyal

Yiddish (A gut ovnt) ‫א גוט ָאוונט‬


Ẹ kú rọ̀ lẹ́
Yoruba
Ẹ ká alẹ́

Yucatec Maya Ma'lob ak'ab

Şan be xêr bo
Zazaki Maxreb be xêr bo
Şanweş
Sawubona (sg)
Zulu
Sanibonani (pl)
Auxiliary and constructed languages

Esperanto Bonan vesperon

Interlingua Bon vespere

Lojban coi
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#srisri Quotes # శ్రీశ్రీ కోట్స్


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#Srisri Quotes # శ్రీ శ్రీ కోట్స్

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#Srisri Quotes # శ్రీ శ్రీ కోట్స్

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#Srisri Quotes # శ్రీ శ్రీ కోట్స్

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