A kindred soul! Who got further in high school than I did.
See, this is part of my problem -- I didn't finish high school, so I missed some courses.
Mal ,'Our Mrs. Reynolds'
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risque (and frisque), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
A kindred soul! Who got further in high school than I did.
See, this is part of my problem -- I didn't finish high school, so I missed some courses.
Yes, I know, P-C, but we do not press this point. We waive it. We rise above it.
hearting Emily so fucking much right now
joins the hearting
Or, if you prefer, we could talk about voltage-gated channels.
Kv2 and Kv3 channels are delayed rectifiers, while Kv1 and Kv4 channels are A-type. The delayed rectifiers are slow activating and slow inactivating, responsible for the restoration of the membrane potential (Coetzee et al. 233-85). Like all voltage-gated potassium channels, they allow a potassium efflux to counteract the sodium influx. Their kinetics are very important, as the membrane may not depolarize again until the delayed rectifiers have done their job. They are sensitive to block by TEA. A-type channels are both fast activating and fast inactivating; they respond immediately to membrane depolarization (Jerng, Pfaffinger, and Covarrubias 343-69). They are sensitive to block by 4-aminopyridine (4-AP).
I love the Buffistas. They get my jokes.
I looked at that and was all, "That sounds fam--did she just? Dude." (Okay, I know why I didn't pick up on it at first. Cause it's inexact: "But we waive that point. We do not press it. We look over it." Also, I was thinking of the wrong show. I SUCK.)
askye and Calli have new tags.
"But we waive that point. We do not press it. We look over it."
I use "Against our will, Papa! Against our will!" all. the. time.
I use "Against our will, Papa! Against our will!" all. the. time.
I can't think of a G&S one right now, but the Theater Line I Use All. The. Time is "[We] know what's up, and who will soon go down" from Goodnight Desdemona (Good Morning Juliet). It was the first play I'd ever done. Also the first I ever auditioned for.
There was a hilarious time when a friend of mine and I burst into "Appear! Appear! Appear!" at the same time, though.
Goodnight Desdemona (Good Morning Juliet)
Eeee! I did that show! So much (weird) fun and such brutal hard work.
Eeee! I did that show!
Ooh! In what capacity? I was Professor Night/Othello/Tybalt. It was my first acting role, so I probably wasn't all that good. The Thresher reviewer described my Othello as "purposefully (I hope) flat." But I did get to say "titmouse" on stage (well, on the floor...we didn't have a stage so much as...a floor...with curtains).
My capacity was... uhm... I'm full of cold meds and cotton-brained at the moment, but the thesis-doing chick, the one what talks a lot. In my present cottony state I can't remember her name or call up a single line from the play, but I do recall that sometimes she talked for pages at a time. How the hell did I do that?
It's the cold. It's got to be the cold. I don't want to have to contemplate being old and feeble and past my prime at 36.
but the thesis-doing chick, the one what talks a lot.
Constance. The bloody STAR! Dude, very nice.
I do recall that sometimes she talked for pages at a time. How the hell did I do that?
Yes, yes she does. And often in iambic pentameter. "Perhaps some heartless student spiked my beer."
"Tail they may, but foot they cannot!"
I don't remember that line. Unless it's from something else.