ID:192126
Jul 16 2002, 3:34 pm
|
|
...are the true core of BYONDers. I'm more bored than an idiot sitting at a computer so Ive decided to post my picture on the forum for no reason, enjoy; (Post yours if ya like)
| |
#2 Jul 16 2002, 10:58 pm
|
|
Awwwww... from the subject line, I was sure this post was going to be about The Queen of Swords, a short-lived "action hour"-style TV show set in colonial California, circa early 1800s and featuring a strong, talented cast comprised almost entirely of Highlander alumni and poorly paid Spanish extras.
| |
Awwwww... from the subject line, I was sure this post was going to be about The Queen of Swords, a short-lived "action hour"-style TV show set in colonial California, circa early 1800s and featuring a strong, talented cast comprised almost entirely of Highlander alumni and poorly paid Spanish extras. The lead is good looking. Who cares about the cast? ;-) | |
*pulls a dagger from her boot and throws it at Spuzzum*
| |
Technically, he's half lesbian, I'm pretty sure most of the boys here like girls, just boys are lesbians with different sex parts.(Different looks too, although sometimes that is not the case)
<<>>Semaj<<>> | |
1) I don't assassinate lesbians.
2) That wasn't an assassin reference, that was a Queen of Swords reference. | |
Yes, and you're a homosexual but with different sexual preferences, and a Martian, but with a different planet of origin, and you're blue with purple polka dots, except that you're not. You have gills, except they're internal, shaped like lungs, and serve to extract oxygen from air.
Do we have any more meaningful statements to make? | |
Yea, Orange is a color, but its not named after the fruit, nor is the fruit named after the color.
<<>>Semaj<<>> | |
Actually, a few seconds research reveals that the color seems to be named after the fruit, whose English name is derived by way of several intermediaries from an ancient Sanskrit word that can be rendered roughly in English characters as "narangh".
| |
Impressive, seems your super conductive research powers are of use, but can you find out who invented the smore, in what year, and what country/or state?
<<>>Semaj<<>> | |
The first recorded recipe for s'mores appeared in Tramping and Trailing with the Girl Scouts, circa 1927. Obviously, a U.S. publication. No particular person seems to have been cited. Since roasting marshmallows is a long-established tradition, it's likely that the s'more, or perhaps several variations on it, popped up simultaneously in several locales.
| |
RaeKwon