Poor Emily is all tuckered out...she's fast asleep, all cuddled up on the couch. I'd take a picture, but that'd be mean.
Mean to her, maybe, but what about us, huh?
Either way you're mean to someone.
[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.
Poor Emily is all tuckered out...she's fast asleep, all cuddled up on the couch. I'd take a picture, but that'd be mean.
Mean to her, maybe, but what about us, huh?
Either way you're mean to someone.
Now Toto's all cuddled up with sleeping Emily. So. Damn. Cute.
I think pictures must be taken at this point.
ION, I am making dinner, but don't want to wake the sleeping beauties. So, should I make mashed potatoes as a side dish, or is Asian salad and Rueben Ring enough?
Juliana has a point. Toto would want a picture.
Yeah, but, um, I have to live with Emily. We don't want no crankies.
What is reuben ring? It sounds like I want some.
What is reuben ring? It sounds like I want some.
It makes your reuben last longer?
I know I'm always startled by the way Canadians (and I assume Brits) say Regina with a long I sound. It is said Re-geena here.
Yep. (That's my middle name.)
Actually, I've got a first name with two legitimate spellings, of which I seem to have the less common; a middle name with two legitimate pronunciations, of which I use the one that seems to be unique to the US; and a last name that no one who doesn't know German can spell or pronounce right on the first try.
Cindy, Erika's quite right (as are you) -- my surname rhymes with 'Gleason' and the 'h' is silent. TEE-sen is a close approximation.
It's German by way of Denmark -- thus the similarity to Petersen, Olafsen, etc. Though I have no idea who this fellow named 'Thies' was.
JZ, thanks and backflung.
Can't say I've ever heard a non-Canadian ever say that anyway - but I'll go out on a limb and say the pronunciation difference is because we're twelve.
It's not too uncommon a name out here, most of the women I know with that name are Italian-American, and I'm sure that's why there's the long E sound in it, instead of the long I, which just is far too vagina for me. /also twelve
Yep. (That's my middle name.)
See Hil, don't you want to just say, "You dirty Canadians. It makes a long "E" sound!"?
It's German by way of Denmark -- thus the similarity to Petersen, Olafsen, etc. Though I have no idea who this fellow named 'Thies' was.
Oh, I would have said the H. I'm glad I know. Thies was a famous lover of Bitches, who was praised wherever he went, for his grokking of them, and by grokking, I mean...well, just the actuall grok is enough, isn't it?