
Ben Affleck, mallard at large |
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Actually, the fracking does not do as much damage as putting the waste water BACK in the ground and causing all of those old faults to lubricated and slide easier, thus causing earthquakes.
{uses Crane Style to deflect possible political discussion, saving everyone from flaming bikes} Aww jiss, baby. Lube your cracks, gonna slip & slide against each other, then we'll feel the earth shake. Gonna frack you good and slow.
Edit: Nekkid innuendo?
Edit 2: Nekkid inyourendo?

captain yesterday |
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Death Blizzard update, the morning before edition: we've been bumped up slightly, 5-7 inches (of snow), winter storm warnings have been declared!
Yup, El Nino winter has definitely made everyone soft, 5-7 inches (of snow) isn't a winter storm worthy of warnings and doom or gloom, it's a succession of Kodak moments.

captain yesterday |
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I have compiled a list of things Jon Snow knows.
Well played good sir! Well played indeed. :-D

Freehold DM |
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I have done my unclely duty and have taken my nephew to see Star Wars. We wore our Star Wars shirts and I answered Star Wars questions and got him Star Wars candy and we went in search of Star Wars toys afterwards. He plans to design the pop-up/drop-down guns that I want on my car, he fell in love with the scene where the gun dropped down and started picking off enemies.

Tacticslion |

I am walking around and at work, no longer coughing so hard that it induces vomiting!
Yay!
Yay!
My poor wife is home sick. She gave me a kiss in a moment of pity when I was feeling particularly wretched and now suffers for it.
Boo!
I'll be praying for her. I know that sucks. :/

Icyshadow |

I have compiled a list of things Jon Snow knows.
Link didn't work for me D:

Tacticslion |

A question for Americans.
How do you, personally, pronounce the word 'sage' ?
"sss"
"ay"
"j'h"
... or "s-ayj'h" for me.
EDIT:
Say-juh.
Also rather accurate.
EDIT 2:
Limeylongears wrote:Correctly.A question for Americans.
How do you, personally, pronounce the word 'sage' ?
Also, also rather accurate. :)

Aranna |
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The kids will be getting new beds this spring, maybe bunk beds depending on how expensive they are, the extra space would be nice (essential).
I wish I had known this in November. My brother had a beautiful bunk bed he was getting rid of. You could have had it for free. It was hand made by my engineer father in his wood shop and solid oak.

Ambrosia Slaad |
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I have done my unclely duty and have taken my nephew to see Star Wars.... He plans to design the pop-up/drop-down guns that I want on my car, he fell in love with the scene where the gun dropped down and started picking off enemies.
I haven't seen the movie yet (gasp!, I know, I know); do you mean the drop-down belly gun on the Falcon? That was a pretty good scene in ESB when they used that gun to take out the advancing snowtroopers in the Hoth hanger.
But... if you want pop-up automated cannons, you can't do better than the scene at the end of The Expanse episode 4, "CQB", when the Tachi escapes.
Remember the Cant.

Freehold DM |
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Freehold DM wrote:I have done my unclely duty and have taken my nephew to see Star Wars.... He plans to design the pop-up/drop-down guns that I want on my car, he fell in love with the scene where the gun dropped down and started picking off enemies.I haven't seen the movie yet (gasp!, I know, I know);
This will not stand.
goes over to Hayaikaze-kai
speaks into innocuous wristwatch BIG O! SHOWTIME!
bike transforms into motorcycle
drives down to Florida
has random encounters with gators, swamp dwellers, pythons, Whedonites
takes Amby to movie, has popcorn with fried gator on the side for snack, blue milk for beverage
But... if you want pop-up automated cannons, you can't do better than the scene at the end of The Expanse episode 4, "CQB", when the Tachi escapes.
Remember the Cant.
Quietly marries Amby after film, has nephew make eel-powered hovercraft for her

Limeylongears |
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Limeylongears wrote:Rhymes with "age", "page" or "rage". Is it different in the UK?A question for Americans.
How do you, personally, pronounce the word 'sage' ?
Thankyou, everybody.
No, but there appear to be a number of regional variations in the US which are making my job just that tiny bit harder at the moment... Still, nothing to complain about. After all, af at first you don't succ-say-juh, try, try, try again.
Ha! Ha! Ha! Linguistic joke time!

Redbeard the Scruffy |
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I heard a lecture in high school about how American accents are closer to Shakespeare original due to the fact that around colonial times before the revolution mainland British commoners started emulating their upper class, leading to the various British accents we know today, while the colonists couldn't keep up with the times, and thus didn't evolve, and lead to the split in style.
So it's actually you all butchering the classics, not us!

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I heard a lecture in high school about how American accents are closer to Shakespeare original due to the fact that around colonial times before the revolution mainland British commoners started emulating their upper class, leading to the various British accents we know today, while the colonists couldn't keep up with the times, and thus didn't evolve, and lead to the split in style.
So it's actually you all butchering the classics, not us!
I've heard that as well.

Limeylongears |
2 people marked this as a favorite. |

I heard a lecture in high school about how American accents are closer to Shakespeare original due to the fact that around colonial times before the revolution mainland British commoners started emulating their upper class, leading to the various British accents we know today, while the colonists couldn't keep up with the times, and thus didn't evolve, and lead to the split in style.
So it's actually you all butchering the classics, not us!
Given when the first British colonists arrived in the Americas, that first part is pretty likely; mainland British accents evolving from commoners trying to emulate the upper classes, not so much, given quite how much they vary (and how deeply they differ from the Queen's English, in very many respects). That the American accent got 'stuck', so to speak, given its relative isolation, makes sense.
I remember someone saying they'd traced back the stereotypical American accent/a lot of early dialect words to East Anglia, but I can't remember who said it and why, so it may be rubbish.