Ooh, that sucks, Em. Is there anything to prevent someone from lying and saying "Nope, never got it!"?
One of my best friends (from high school no less) has primarily gone by his nickname "Raven" as long as I've known him.
Heh. In college, one of my good friends also went by Raven. I heard about him before I met him, and when I walked in to the office and saw a round-faced guy with long strawberry blonde hair and khakis, my first thought was "that CANNOT be "raven"!"
1) I don't have the funny syphilis. 2) I don't have lobsters. 3) I am not carrying/did not father the anti-christ.
In a survey of 25,000 peole, 33% select 1, 60% select 2 and 7% select 3.
How does this tell you the prevalence of any or all of the three?
Well, if you trust your list, then 2/3 have the funny syphilis, 40% have lobsters, and 93% are spawning the antichrist.
I don't remotely see the point, but I'm going to re-read the article later because things hurt.
Are you saying love sublets from osteoarthritis?
I think that would be hard to fit into the melody and/or rhyming scheme.
Well, if you trust your list, then 2/3 have the funny syphilis, 40% have lobsters, and 93% are spawning the antichrist.
Not if the question said "pick one you don't have." What if I only have the antichrist?
You know that ad about depression hurting everyone and everywhere? Some people I know made it into a cheer, and now that's what I always think. "Who does depression hurt?" "Everyone! Everyone!" "Where does depression hurt?" "Everywhere! Everywhere!"
Not if the question said "pick one you don't have." What if I only have the antichrist?
Well, yeah. And if the question said "which of these is the funniest" the answers mean something else again. But my pain-laced understanding of the article is that the question says "Check the ones you don't have."