do you everl talk about cleaving someone in twain?
Nah. It's more of a julienne thing.
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.
do you everl talk about cleaving someone in twain?
Nah. It's more of a julienne thing.
It's more of a julienne thing
To me, it seems wrong to use the word 'julienne' without the word 'fries' after it....
Holy-y Cheese! Nobody is watching the Brotherhood thing but me.
Cool headline of the week:
Police station is no place for gnomes
If your enchanted garden lady has magically disappeared or your plastic gnome has gone on the lam, you might want to look in Warrenville.
Police there are trying to find the rightful owners of 20 lawn ornaments and statues recently turned in to the Police Department. As of Friday, two people had come forward to claim their statues.
Meanwhile, the other lawn ornaments remain locked in a caged area, alongside four stolen beer kegs, in the department's dimly lit sally port.
it seems wrong to use the word 'julienne' without the word 'fries' after it....
Good chance that's an opinion shared by the person not wielding the sword too.
twainTechnology without an interesting name. But then I haven't talked about TWAIN devices in a while either.
EW!
Saw an ankle dislocated (woman slipped off a curb) about a month ago and had to keep the woman from looking at her foot while we called an ambulance. I wish someone had stopped me from looking at it. Kinda stays with you.
btw, was it good? The description sounded fun.
It's just about to start, actually.
Sorry Gus, I'm reading up on the Spice Trade and how it affected world history.
In sum: Between 1200 and 1858, whoever controlled the spice trade was the richest nation in the world, and as the richest produced its greatest cultural offerings. Venice from 1200 to 1500 (see, Merchant of Venice), then Spain/Portual through the 16th century; Holland in the 17th century (see, Rembrandt, Dutch masters etc.); Britain in the 18th century.
All over nutmeg and cloves.
A month-ago EW!?