magicbastarder wrote: » this sounds like an internet meme. 'is this bike blue or green?' it's green.
Wishbone Ash wrote: » Sweet Jesus, did no one have a word with him?
...the calm sanctuary of its interior, unequalled.
buffalo wrote: » What a dickhead.
nee wrote: » The father has a friend called Mickey Dick. One is not enough. The nicknames of his friends are hilarious. There's also The Cardboard (why? "He was always The Cardboard". Ok :pac:). They're inherited also. Pat the Mouse bought a house previously owed by The Mouse Farrell and got the name with it. I must start collecting them. They're magnificent.
Níl fhios agam
Alek wrote: » What does it mean?
I don't know...
Alek wrote: » Very useful of you Sir.
Try a bit of google translate there, Alex.
Alek wrote: » Aaaah, don't spoil my Saturday midday trolling
doozerie wrote: » Some nicknames are funny, some are pure passive aggressive, that one manages to be a bit of both.
magicbastarder wrote: » there was a guy the year below me in school who was called cockface. i couldn't tell you his real name (not because of boards rules, i genuinely don't know it). it was so common a teacher once accidentally used it in class (allegedly). i must try to find out if it lasted more than a few years after he left school.
Harrybelafonte wrote: » My area of the country, you get your name and your dad’s. If that matches someone’s already then you get your name, your dad’s and his mother’s or father’s.Or you get a particularly mean name which everyone uses to refer to you but never uses in your presence.
doozerie wrote: » Amongst the marketing materials in my letterbox today was a booklet from Jaguar Land Rover. I've never bought into the "your car is a reflection of who and what you are" mindset so usually I just chuck such marketing stuff into the recycling bin unread.
tomasrojo wrote: » I read something about car advertising once, and AFAIR the companies don't really expect most buyers to use SUVs for adventures. They're mostly for people with kids who want people to think or to cod themselves that they might just be swashbuckling adventurers, rather than life-trapped people with booster seats in the back.
rollingscone wrote: » Promised Mrs RS that I wasn't going out today, but now it's snowing and I have an MTB....must resist!
Middle Man wrote: » I must also be said that a cyclist travelling at any speed of 30kph or higher tend to be far less observant than other road users. I've cycled (in the past) and now drive and walk a lot - between those three modes, cycling is the most dangerous in terms of awareness regarding one's surroundings.