Go back
Thread-Killing Champ (May '05)

Thread-Killing Champ (May '05)

General

Vote Up
Vote Down

Originally posted by GalaxyShield
Crap. At least I won the bet pool for when you'd be back. I was hoping nobody would win ๐Ÿ™.
how many people bet 'never'?

Vote Up
Vote Down

Originally posted by Nordlys
Ratibor! Und der Fluss Mississippi und die Stadt Honolulu und der See Titicaca; der Popocatepetl liegt nicht in Kanada, sondern in Mexiko, Mexiko, Mexiko.
You mis-spelt "Titanic".

Vote Up
Vote Down

Originally posted by Nordlys
No. Most of them are male. That's why it is "der Toaster" in German.
I thought "das" was the masculine in German .

Vote Up
Vote Down

Originally posted by Moldy Crow
I thought "das" was the masculine in German .
They say Das is good, but it's really piss.

Vote Up
Vote Down

Originally posted by Moldy Crow
I thought "das" was the masculine in German .
Das is neuter
derr is masculine
die is feminine

Vote Up
Vote Down

Originally posted by zakkwylder
You said it, not me.
correct.

Vote Up
Vote Down

๐Ÿ˜ด

Vote Up
Vote Down

Originally posted by Wildfire
๐Ÿ˜ด
What's going on, WildChild?

Vote Up
Vote Down

Originally posted by darvlay
What's going on, WildChild?
Not much, Darv, just chillin'. And you?

Vote Up
Vote Down

1 edit
Vote Up
Vote Down

I wonder how many pages there are in this thread...

Great god! 365!

Vote Up
Vote Down

Originally posted by lukemcmullan
I wonder how many pages there are in this thread...

Great god! 365!
... so far ...๐Ÿ™„

Vote Up
Vote Down

Originally posted by Moldy Crow
I thought "das" was the masculine in German .
No, "der" is masculine, "das" is neuter, as aspviper said.

By the way, "the crow" is "die Krähe". ๐Ÿ˜‰

Vote Up
Vote Down

erethism

painful, unhealthy overexcitement, especially of the mental powers or
passions. This comes from a Greek word meaning 'to irritate,' and a
misspelling, erythism, appeared in quite a few medical books.

Vote Up
Vote Down

Originally posted by Nordlys
erethism

painful, unhealthy overexcitement, especially of the mental powers or
passions. This comes from a Greek word meaning 'to irritate,' and a
misspelling, erythism, appeared in quite a few medical books.
๐Ÿ˜ž

Cookies help us deliver our Services. By using our Services or clicking I agree, you agree to our use of cookies. Learn More.