I don't like today. I want to give it back and get a new one.
Hey!
'Shindig'
[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.
I don't like today. I want to give it back and get a new one.
Hey!
I would always think of Fay as Fay now, but her given name is nice too.
Oh, hush, birthday boy. In my plan, you get an extra half day of birthday, since it's already 2:30 your time.
And then we could have guys with Alp horns!
For me, that's why Cola didn't stick. Again I say, thank goodness.
Reading the last twenty posts or so, I guess I'm not really all that adamant about what people can and can't call me. I don't especially like the name Nikki and I tend to cringe a little when people call me Nikki but I don't get truly upset or overly bothered by it. Mostly I'm speaking of people I consider to be friends, though, when I say "people".
Total strangers that just shorten my name for some unknown reason, however, should be sent to another planet.
Daylight savings time has eaten my brain.
We've been saved from daylight for a week now, and it's still screwing with my head.
I would always think of Fay as Fay now
I always think of her as FayJay, which is fun to say..jay.
Leah, Sarah, and Rachel aren't as regularly nicked as, say, Susan, Stephen, James
In my experience, Rachel is just as ripe. It just depends on the enforcing body.
"Rache" doesn't seem as common a name as Sue, Susie, Steve, Stevie, Jim, Jimmy... that sort of thing. Off the top of my head I can't think of an actor or athlete or otherwise famous person who regularly goes by "Rache" but I can think of bunches of the others.
In my head (a scary place) there is a difference between spoken nicknames and written nicknames. Rache is a perfect example. I had never seen it written before, but I have used it.
Just like calling K-Bug "Kel", though I'd never write that to her.
I'm okay with nicknames as long as they aren't rude. I've been called Kat, Kaff, Kaffy and Kate.
I do, however, hate it with an unreasonable passion when people spell my name with a "C." Every Cathy I've known has been another "c" word (c.f. above, rude).
Just like my friend Joy said about guys of her acquaintance named Rick. "In my experience, the 'p" is silent."
I am makeing the best of monday by watching Bride and Prejudice.
It is more fun that the kira Knightly version - because things can be changed in order to fit the culture norms. and of course, Naveen Andrews