Return of the Revenge of the Son of Saying Hi to Josiah!
- Stevenson
- Shiny Wobbuffet Prince
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- Joined: Sun Sep 04, 2005 4:13 pm
- Location: The Undisclosed Location
Goyven. i must get tired eventually of seeing "Hey hey hey" in front of every post. Sorry, fat albert was cool before the movie/show.
*cough*
Anyways...happy birthday Silver! Curse you for being a mere 8 days older than me. Nevertheless, I hope that your festive day was good.
Edit: Also, I gotta say Jack Spicer is cooler than Chase what's his face. Even though that guy with the white hoodie pwns the crap out of everything.
*cough*
Anyways...happy birthday Silver! Curse you for being a mere 8 days older than me. Nevertheless, I hope that your festive day was good.
Edit: Also, I gotta say Jack Spicer is cooler than Chase what's his face. Even though that guy with the white hoodie pwns the crap out of everything.
Stevenson's Vocabulary Word of the Week:
Foment: (verb) To excite or arouse, i.e. 2014's Week of Randomness hopes to foment some activity on the forums.
Stevenson's Latin Phrase of the Week:
Brutum Fulmen: (senseless thunderbolt) This phrase, coined by Pliny the elder, is used to refer to an empty threat.






Foment: (verb) To excite or arouse, i.e. 2014's Week of Randomness hopes to foment some activity on the forums.
Stevenson's Latin Phrase of the Week:
Brutum Fulmen: (senseless thunderbolt) This phrase, coined by Pliny the elder, is used to refer to an empty threat.






- Stevenson
- Shiny Wobbuffet Prince
- Posts: 4434
- Joined: Sun Sep 04, 2005 4:13 pm
- Location: The Undisclosed Location
Yes, I believe that we've already determined that. I just dislike the movie. It ruined the original routines(s) done by Monsieur Cosby. Well, somewhat ruined.
Stevenson's Vocabulary Word of the Week:
Foment: (verb) To excite or arouse, i.e. 2014's Week of Randomness hopes to foment some activity on the forums.
Stevenson's Latin Phrase of the Week:
Brutum Fulmen: (senseless thunderbolt) This phrase, coined by Pliny the elder, is used to refer to an empty threat.






Foment: (verb) To excite or arouse, i.e. 2014's Week of Randomness hopes to foment some activity on the forums.
Stevenson's Latin Phrase of the Week:
Brutum Fulmen: (senseless thunderbolt) This phrase, coined by Pliny the elder, is used to refer to an empty threat.






- Silver
- Shiny Pidgeot King
- Posts: 18079
- Joined: Mon Jul 12, 2004 9:25 pm
- Location: Somewhere over the rainbow
- Contact:
Hi! My English teacher assigned 37 pages of reading in one night! I s'pose this wouldn't be so bad if I didn't ABSOLUTELY HATE READING and book didn't disgrace EVERY PAGE with fowl language!
"Irregardless" and "Over exaggerated" are NEVER CORRECT EVER because they are redundant
Regardless means "without regard", and adding "ir" on the front actually makes it a double negative; exaggerate means "to overstate" so you're literally saying "over overstate."
Example: I can not exaggerate the importance of this fact enough, regardless of how often people ignore it.

Regardless means "without regard", and adding "ir" on the front actually makes it a double negative; exaggerate means "to overstate" so you're literally saying "over overstate."
Example: I can not exaggerate the importance of this fact enough, regardless of how often people ignore it.

- Stevenson
- Shiny Wobbuffet Prince
- Posts: 4434
- Joined: Sun Sep 04, 2005 4:13 pm
- Location: The Undisclosed Location
Oh Opal, you don't know the half of it. I read the entire blasted thing last year, trust me, it get's more
as it goes on. Definitley not high on my favorite books list.
Stevenson's Vocabulary Word of the Week:
Foment: (verb) To excite or arouse, i.e. 2014's Week of Randomness hopes to foment some activity on the forums.
Stevenson's Latin Phrase of the Week:
Brutum Fulmen: (senseless thunderbolt) This phrase, coined by Pliny the elder, is used to refer to an empty threat.






Foment: (verb) To excite or arouse, i.e. 2014's Week of Randomness hopes to foment some activity on the forums.
Stevenson's Latin Phrase of the Week:
Brutum Fulmen: (senseless thunderbolt) This phrase, coined by Pliny the elder, is used to refer to an empty threat.






- Silver
- Shiny Pidgeot King
- Posts: 18079
- Joined: Mon Jul 12, 2004 9:25 pm
- Location: Somewhere over the rainbow
- Contact:
Gah... I have ta read Crapeo and Suxiet this year, too... but it's probably better than Native Son. There was this conversation that lasted a page, and not ONE SENTENCE didn't contain at least one cuss. If I'm supposed to do a book report on it, I think I'll do a report on why you shouldn't swear instead. Sure, I'll probably get in huge trouble, but it's not like I care. They can't do anything.
And yeah, I got your message, and I'll reply to it as soon as I get a chance... which will be as soon as I'm done with my homework. Probably sometime next week, if I'm lucky.
And yeah, I got your message, and I'll reply to it as soon as I get a chance... which will be as soon as I'm done with my homework. Probably sometime next week, if I'm lucky.
"Irregardless" and "Over exaggerated" are NEVER CORRECT EVER because they are redundant
Regardless means "without regard", and adding "ir" on the front actually makes it a double negative; exaggerate means "to overstate" so you're literally saying "over overstate."
Example: I can not exaggerate the importance of this fact enough, regardless of how often people ignore it.

Regardless means "without regard", and adding "ir" on the front actually makes it a double negative; exaggerate means "to overstate" so you're literally saying "over overstate."
Example: I can not exaggerate the importance of this fact enough, regardless of how often people ignore it.







