Man, I love summer. The ingredients in the salad I just ate (mesclun, cucumber, carrot, basil, cherry tomatos) have all been picked within the last 24 hours, either at my home or not too far away from it, and it was just DELICIOUS.
Spike's Bitches 37: You take the killing for granted.
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risqué (and frisqué), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
Late to the party, but I just had to mention that the Salem area has a mini-chain of package stores called Bunghole Liquors.
They sell t-shirts with various refernces to "The Bunghole" (e.g. "I got it at the Bunghole").
They sell t-shirts with various refernces to "The Bunghole" (e.g. "I got it at the Bunghole").
Do they have a shirt that says, "I got shitfaced at the Bunghole"?
A bunghole is not a cornhole.
But can your cornhole at Bunghole?
the Salem area has a mini-chain of package stores called Bunghole Liquors.
the one in Peabody plays a crucial role as a landmark when I give directions.
ION, is "broach" a particularly uncommon or advanced vocabulary word? I used it in an email with a co-worker ("we should broach the subject to X...") and she had no idea what it meant. Am I a total snob for being bewildered about her not knowing this?
"Broach" is one of the many perfectly good words that I use knowing that most people will not know what I mean.
I am a snob, and I like it that way.
I know "broach". I use "broach". I have never gotten the deer in the headlights response.
Am I a total snob for being bewildered about her not knowing this?
Hold firm! Stand your ground against the dumbing down of the language!
ION, is "broach" a particularly uncommon or advanced vocabulary word? I used it in an email with a co-worker ("we should broach the subject to X...") and she had no idea what it meant. Am I a total snob for being bewildered about her not knowing this?
I don't find it an uncommon word, but then, sometimes there's just a word that some people have never come across, or haven't come across in a particular context.