Oh yeah. Just proved it to myself for 2x2s, guess it would make sense. Anyway, thank you!
Natter 39 and Holding
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.
Is Supernatural being discussed in Boxed Set?
Is Supernatural being discussed in Boxed Set?
Even if it's not now, it fits within the charter -- it might be easier to drum up conversation.
God bless MIT. CKR has always looked weathered!
Maybe that needed a paragraph break.
Did you see Supernatural, Emily? He looked way more weathered than this.
Kat, it was the hugging line.
I haven't seen it. I was going to counter with an image of him in "Touching Evil" (which I only saw that episode of, and therefore hadn't, until now, made the connection with the British series), but since your point is more weathered recently than earlier... you're right.
I'm still saying, always weathered a bit. But yeah, more so now.
Ah. That makes sense, Sue.
It wigs me out that I so understand Christina, that I'd say fully 50% of what her lines are.
I'll take CKR, weathered or no. It's just the character showing through, really.
In fact, there are seven knee ligaments, if I am counting correctly. They are the patellar, oblique popliteal, arcuate popliteal, tibial collateral, fibular collateral, and anterior and posterior cruciate ligaments. The MCL you're referring to is, I am guessing, the meniscus? Or medial condyle.
I've heard it called the medial collateral ligament.
Still, yes, I would say if you're up to three torn items in one knee, then just say that the knee is frelled.
And he's out for the season.
OTOH, it drives me nuts when sportswriters don't differentiate between the rotator cuff and the labrum. One is basically fatal to pitching careers, while the other is not.
We know the difference around here in Seattle, since every pitcher has either a labrum or rotator problem.
A vast majority of pitchers with rotator problems eventually recover. Something like only 15% of labrum tears ever fully heal.