Mind the spelling though
No worries - as long as the player listens, we should be set. Now we just have to capture one...
Willow ,'Showtime'
[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.
Mind the spelling though
No worries - as long as the player listens, we should be set. Now we just have to capture one...
I lose everything, all the time. In this recent clean up I am finding stuff I forgot I even had because it has been lost for so long. Keys, cellphone, wallet, debit card (usually just in the wrong slot of my wallet), and purse are misplaced at least once a day.
Well, I haven't pulled the couch all the way out yet, and I suspect that once I vacuum in there tomorrow I'll find a family of wild racoons underneath.
Have a camera ready, 'kay?
Sometimes I lose things, but mostly I'm the person who finds things for people.
I should rent CJ out for finding things. He has this knack for it.
I used to lose my keys a lot. all over town. But when we moved out here - i didn't know anyone and they didn't know me. So I felt I had to be better about not loseing the impt things. And most of the time when I do lose something - I can tell youwhere i have lost it , and I am right.
remotes don't come under impt. and I am better at finding things than Matt. but he has no method when he is looking for things, because he loses things very infrequently.
My dad kept losing the remote so my mom bought him some gadget at Radio Shack that is a wristwatch remote. He had a lot of fun with that.
My dad kept losing the remote so my mom bought him some gadget at Radio Shack that is a wristwatch remote. He had a lot of fun with that.
That's really quite cool.
Very Dick Tracy. And I think that universal remotes work on some unusual things like certain microwaves. Perfect gift for pranksters.
Here's an example of a math lesson with kinesthetic stuff... I have a resume I'm submitting to a creative firm. I want it to stand out among the hundreds they'll no doubt receive so I'm submitting it in the form of a paper construction. That is, I'll submit it flat, but it will be able to be assembled into a shape. If I were better at math, I'd be able to figure out how to break the 3-D form into a 2-D paper cutout. But I'm awful at math so it's going to involve a lot of trial and error on my part.
It's surprising how little I was able to find on the web about this subject. I have great admiration for those folks who design innovative packaging that was clearly assembled from one piece. When I was in 4th grade, a kid's parent who did paper 3-d works came in and presented. It's a real artform.
Anyway, applying the math learned in school to that would be really cool.