I see what you did there, Zen.
Mal ,'Out Of Gas'
Natter 70: Hookers and Blow
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.
But for this Descriptivist, I think you've got to bow down and kiss the glove of Rob Halford.
I don't know who Rob Halford is, but if he thinks it's thing, he can kiss my... glove.
"THINK" is not a noun. It would be "thought."
Don't make me get all zombie jaw on your asses.
I don't like it when Mommy and Daddy fight.
"THINK" is not a noun. It would be "thought."
It's not supposed to be grammatical, it's supposed to be amusing! It's a play on words! Why is there no whimsy in your soul?
We'll always have fang lewdness, Amy.
It's not supposed to be grammatical, it's supposed to be amusing!
When you leave grammar, you've gone to the dark side.
"THINK" is not a noun. It would be "thought."
It's an idiom! Damn!!
Aha! Think is a noun. Or was when the saying originated - [link]
“Think” is a noun as well as a verb. “Think” the noun first appeared around 1834 meaning “an act or period of thinking” (“Let’s have a cigar and a quiet think,” 1891), and, by 1886, “a thought” or “an idea” (“A thing must be a think before it be a thing,” 1887). We rarely see this noun form of “think” today (outside of this particular phrase), but in the late 19th century when the phrase became popular, “another think coming” would have been understood as equivalent to “another thought coming,” i.e., a change of mind.
We'll always have fang lewdness, Amy.
::clings::
No, you must revere the Huxtable sweater! Think! Sick. AND tired!
Um, house, Kate? For reals? Are there, like pictures yet, or are you still in HOMG, house maybe?
I has no useful information on refis, but I wish you well.
As I embrace the poor, loveable wrongheaded thingers.