Can I mop your brow? I am at the ready with the fearsome brow-mop.

Wash ,'Objects In Space'


Spike's Bitches 45: That sure as hell wasn't in the brochure.  

[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.


Seska (the Watcher-in-Training) - Nov 12, 2009 8:19:28 am PST #222 of 30000
"We're all stories, in the end. Just make it a good one, eh?"

Living in Brooklyn, it cracks me up that "chutzpah" would ever have to be explained.

I'm British... :P


Jessica - Nov 12, 2009 8:23:30 am PST #223 of 30000
If I want to become a cloud of bats, does each bat need a separate vaccination?

You Brits, with your lifts and your lorries and your extra u's and your lack of Yiddish slang.


tommyrot - Nov 12, 2009 8:24:42 am PST #224 of 30000
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

You Brits, with your lifts and your lorries and your extra u's and your lack of Yiddish slang.

And spanners! Only a Brit would throw a spanner in the works.

eta: And torches! Brits have electric torches, somewhat like our flashlights....


Typo Boy - Nov 12, 2009 8:26:40 am PST #225 of 30000
Calli: My people have a saying. A man who trusts can never be betrayed, only mistaken.Avon: Life expectancy among your people must be extremely short.

The Girl thinks he should play a dead patient. This would be something of a waste of his genius, though.

He does not have to start out dead. Have him do a death scene.


Gudanov - Nov 12, 2009 8:27:37 am PST #226 of 30000
Coding and Sleeping

You Brits, with your lifts and your lorries and your extra u's

You'd think that as long as they've been using English they'd have it right by now.


Seska (the Watcher-in-Training) - Nov 12, 2009 8:29:01 am PST #227 of 30000
"We're all stories, in the end. Just make it a good one, eh?"

I am giggling at the Brit-bashing.

Admittedly, this is because I'm half Irish.

ETA:

Only a Brit would throw a spanner in the works.

Do you actually throw a wrench in the works? That just sounds odd. (The Girl, being an American citizen, is always talking about AJs. The first time she asked me to pass one, I thought she was taking the piss.)

ETA again: She's just told me that AJ is not American. Never mind. Friends and I regularly laugh when she says things like "make a left" (what, dig up the road so as to make one? It's turn left) and similar.


erikaj - Nov 12, 2009 8:30:28 am PST #228 of 30000
I'm a fucking amazing catch!--Fiona Gallagher, Shameless(US)

I love it, but I'm sure that when I say it reminds people of Mikey Kellerman mispronouncing "Oy vey is mir...I'm so meshugennah, I could plotz." Although I have a special soft spot for "kvelling" which is surprisingly hard for an unhappy Lutheran girl in the desert to work into conversation. I try, though. ETA: I'm mostly not excited enough to give anything a full "kvell" but it's a great word, isn't it?


erikaj - Nov 12, 2009 8:35:42 am PST #229 of 30000
I'm a fucking amazing catch!--Fiona Gallagher, Shameless(US)

OMG, I'm really hoping I'm not having a Gosselin "The Judaica is teh awesome!!1" moment, there. Because I think those things are awesome, and I'm eating pastrami on rye right now AIFG, but I hope you know I don't mean it in a douchey, appropriate-y way.


Zenkitty - Nov 12, 2009 8:39:17 am PST #230 of 30000
Every now and then, I think I might actually be a little odd.

I’m not ignorant (of theword’s meaning, anyway) and it still gives a knee jerk reaction. Yes, it’s a perfectly good word, but why use a word that is (or seems to be) loaded with negative connotation when there are plenty of others to suffice?

No, I don't think we should. I'm mostly angry about the existence of the other word, which is also used by ignorant people, and which is the real problem. It wouldn't even occur to me to use the word niggardly, I'd just say stingy, but I'm annoyed when people freak out when someone else uses it in proper context.

I remember realizing that what I'd always heard as "chewed" was actually "Jewed", and being utterly horrified that I'd ever said it. In fairness to myself, though, I think my mother actually did say "chewed". I also thought "gypped" was spelled "jipped" when I was younger. Now I avoid saying them both because I don't like the origin of the words, being insults from the start, as opposed to being a misunderstanding of the meaning of a word.


WindSparrow - Nov 12, 2009 8:47:17 am PST #231 of 30000
Love is stronger than death and harder than sorrow. Those who practice it are fierce like the light of stars traveling eons to pierce the night.

I don't want to go to work. I wanna sit here reading Bitches all day and listening to Harvey purr.