Sad I am that removed were the lemur eyes
Don't go getting attached to Lucas visuals. In ten years Palpatine will be played by Dakota Fanning in all versions.
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Sad I am that removed were the lemur eyes
Don't go getting attached to Lucas visuals. In ten years Palpatine will be played by Dakota Fanning in all versions.
Know this I did not:
I knew this. I'm not sure how I feel about that.
Seems like a severe breakdown in communication in people that basically want to achieve the same ends--just by far different means.
I couldn't agree more.
Don't go getting attached to Lucas visuals. In ten years Palpatine will be played by Dakota Fanning in all versions.
The man's incessant tinkering is like picking a scab.
The man's incessant tinkering is like picking a scab.
Except that it doesn't feel good when it comes off.
Except that it doesn't feel good when it comes off.
I'm guessing I'm not designed to be a scab picker. I hate the feeling when they come off. It's the fidget I enjoy -- the actual pick I regret.
Neither here nor there, and I've grossed myself out.
I have cousins who'd pick scabs on their shins until they got close to bone.
ICK. No picky, no picky, no picky.
(Modern) French imperative for "Get out of here": «Va t'en !»
Usually accompanied by an epithet of some sort -- I don't have a 19th-century French equivalent for "varlet" handy, however.
«Aller» (to go) is not only irregular, as ita states, but its imperative formation is even more irregular: Its singular imperative is «va», not «vas».
Something I just don't get is that he had to spend hundreds of hours watching the last two movies in the editing bays, right? How could you be exposed to that much Jar-Jar and not want to kill him in the most grisly fashion conceivable?
its imperative formatiion is even more irregular: Its singular imperative is «t;va»t;, not «vas».
Actually, it's normal/regular for informal imperatives (of verbs ending in -er, at least) to drop the final S.
Why yes, I really am this boring and pedantic, why do you ask?
Ha! Score one for amych -- -er verbs do indeed drop the -s in the singular imperative, except when followed by en or y, as in «vas-y !» or «Manges-en»
Reference: [link]
(search on the phrase "go away" in that page to get to an answer to Susan's original question)