(Print) Use this randomly generated list as your call list when playing the game. There is no need to say the BINGO column name. Place some kind of mark (like an X, a checkmark, a dot, tally mark, etc) on each cell as you announce it, to keep track. You can also cut out each item, place them in a bag and pull words from the bag.
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B. You can hear the founders’ clock and horses whinnying from your window.
B: You sister has taken a great interest in a man that you suspect is not who he says he is.
O: You spurn his advances which delights you to no end and then marry for money.
B: You have silly sisters who you have to guard against reproachful whispers.
B: Everyone in the neighborhood, including your mother, has ranked you and your sisters in order of hotness.
N: Your aunt is mean to you (again)
N: A member of the armed forces makes a move on your sister and she has gone off with him.
B: No one around has a recognizable job except the vicar, and even he rarely seems to be doing it.
N: You dance like it’s 1815! You dance with your best guy friend, a distant but attentive acquaintance and a charming flirty closet gambler.
O: You learn not to stress about mistakes; no one becomes the best without stumbling a bit along the way.
N: You become really quiet around your best male friend because you feel all tingly inside around him
N: A servant steals your finest brooch, and you fire the wrong servant.
N: Someone disagreeable invites you to play cards with them.
B: You would sooner read a book then care about getting married. You love books.
B: A woman who is not your mother treats you like her own daughter. Your actual mother is dead or ridiculous.
L: To your maids’ quarters
L: The Grand Ball
O: You fight off a dozen more bad suitors and realize you want to join the church.
N: A woman tells you a secret and you despise her for it.
G: Verbally engaging in some wit and charm your suitors.
G: Praying for your sister. She needs prayer.
B: You are facing impending poverty following the death of your father.
G: Avoiding your true feelings for the man who does business with your father.
O: You realize reading is one of the purest joys of life.
G: Taking a carriage at night to London on matters of most importance.
L: Immediately to Bath (the city)
O: You realize it’s human to get jealous.
O: You realize who you truly are after learning some hard life lessons about love then you marry who you want.
B: You take care of your father and are learning the pitfalls of English society gossip.
O: You learn three more hobbies to occupy yourself…your next is learning the violin.
L: Down to the servant quarters
G: Changing into a new dress because your bust line looks extra perky today.
G: Raging like any respectable woman would by giving the silent treatment to the people you should be speaking to.
O: You don’t have the time or inclination to get married (until you do).
N: You are bored by a talkative doctor
G: Keeping busy with making unsuccessful attempts at matchmaking your friends.
L: To church
L: On a hunt
G: Throwing an important letter that someone was supposed to read into the fire.
B: You are a bold intelligent woman bucking the social constraints that would often see you silenced (and you look hot in nightgown)
L: Your best friends place, who happens to be a male best friend.
O: The man you thought you despised is actually the man you love.
G: Running in the rain and becoming ill.
N: You meet a man you instantly dislike largely due to a series of misconceptions and miscommunications
L: London, generally you avoid London at all cost
O: You throw away your preconceived notions and confess your love to your true love.
G: Meddling in the affairs of your friends, because it’s easier to fix their lives then your own.
O: You realize it’s no good to interfere with other people’s lives.
G: Playing the pianoforte really forte.
L: Sit in the garden to watch archery
L: On a long walk in the country where good looking men on horseback can get a glimpse of your flowing hair in the wind, where you free from societal obligations.
N: You sing so beautifully that you melt everyone’s heart with your purity and virgin-like qualities, especially, the heart of a serious, broody man in the corner.
O: You realize you hate playing the pianoforte.
B: You have five hundred a year. From whom? Five hundred what? No one knows. No one cares. You have it. It’s yours. Every year. All five hundred of it.
N: You receive a letter from a long-lost male friend. It brings you to tears of joy.
G: Attempting to befriend someone slightly below and above your social station.
O: You end up with a man who says ‘Let us have the luxury of silence’. He is a quiet guy what can you say?
N: Meet a tempting but manipulating and conniving man who wants your money
B: You mother is set on marrying you off to the richest suitor. She wants you out of the house.
B: Your father is terrible with money. No one has ever told him this to his face.
O: You realize when people meddle in your affairs, they’re not always coming from a bad place.
G: Making an emotional outburst and walking out.
G: Writing a profound and heartfelt letter in return that never gets to the right person.
N: An unattractive and talkative man you don’t love proposes to you
L: The annual summer garden picnic
N: Your sister becomes ill and must remain in bed even though it’s not her home. You stay to take care of her.
G: Taking an hour out of your day to just sit with your tea (and maybe a friend).
L: To town, you don’t need to buy anything in particular. But you look amazing in a bonnet so why not.
L: The Cottage
L: Anywhere that is not London, generally you avoid London
L: The ocean to breeze in the sea air. For health reasons.
N: Your best guy friend told you off because he sees how you are not living up to your true potential. He says “Badly done…(insert your name)”
O: You realize sisters are forever.
B: You are bored with cross stitch and the high-pitched voice of your mother.
B: You have a very mean aunt but she is rich so she must be tolerated.