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grralph1 wrote: that freak from my forum.
You are now a household name, Sander
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And thou shalt speak my name at the dinner table.
And thou shalt say, "Sander's sound is that of the week, by which all other sounds will be judged from hereon forward."
And thou shalt raise thy hands up in the air and thank me.
Such is the ritual to praise and honor my name.
So sayeth the holy scriptures of Sander Rossel
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grralph1 wrote: that freak from my forum What a lovely boy you have
grralph1 wrote: Back in 21 November 2019. It was OxiDaski Thikhai Thikhai. A good one!
What your son lacks in manners he makes up in taste
grralph1 wrote: I nearly always love your SOTW That's awesome to hear!
I do it to educate people and hopefully support some artists I really like.
grralph1 wrote: What I like about it is that it gives me a window to bands and sounds that I would otherwise never get a chance to hear. This.
Some weeks I get zero response, but other people have told me they check it almost weekly too, so that's why I keep doing it.
Other times I get quite a bit of response.
I love to hear from others about their favorite songs too.
Some SOTWs started as a comment on a previous SOTW.
Others don't make it to SOTW, but still get plenty of playtime.
grralph1 wrote: So Thanks. I love it. You're Welcome[^]
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The word freak is used here as a word of endearment and indicates that a person has some quality that is to be admired. It is often used to foster the admired quality.
"Rock journalism is people who can't write interviewing people who can't talk for people who can't read." Frank Zappa 1980
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Never heard about that, but I believe you
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Isn't that a softcore porn movie?
Looked it up on IMDb and I guess it is.
And with a score of 5.3 it's one of the best in the series
That didn't stop people from making like a hundred different movies and spin-offs though
It did well in the box office, apparently
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Yes, and starring the famous Sylvia Kristel
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Quote:
"An attempt may be a failure, but there should be no failure of attempt".
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Is that a cleaned up version of "do or do not, there is no try"?
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This is a statement coined by an elderly person in my city (Bangalore) in India; this statement was quite famous during my childhood, around 40 years ago.
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Almost posted that 90 minutes ago but couldn't decide if it was or not so I did not, no trying involved.
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if you pronounced "Kant" in it's original way (Dutch/German), well, let's just say NSFW
oh, and Imautomatic didn't need to try.
pestilence [ pes-tl-uh ns ] noun
1. a deadly or virulent epidemic disease. especially bubonic plague.
2. something that is considered harmful, destructive, or evil.
Synonyms: pest, plague, CCP
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lopatir wrote: if you pronounced "Kant" in it's original way (Dutch/German), well, let's just say NSFW As a Dutchie I say "can't" with a slightly harsher KA sound.
I'm now saying it out loud in front of my computer like a total idiot and I think I hear what you mean
The A is pronounced slightly different from the U sound though
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my folks are Dutch, I'm born outside so my primary language is English and never formerly learned Dutch (wasn't a thing in NZ schools) - but I get by, and boosted by a couple of years living in Utrecht including some with other family that didn't speak any English (yeah, your choice: learn to talk or go hungry ).
so used to accented English (from parents and their friends),
... but still always felt awkward when told say "the "Kant's" were coming over to visit," or similar with that family. (great people though.)
works both ways though: while in Utrecht, now I'm the one with the different [zeker niet nederlands] accent I never got the hang of properly sounding "kat" vs ...
--- guarding myself I would normally use "poes"
pestilence [ pes-tl-uh ns ] noun
1. a deadly or virulent epidemic disease. especially bubonic plague.
2. something that is considered harmful, destructive, or evil.
Synonyms: pest, plague, CCP
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true, the young ones all speak (taught) English, but not so much the older generation.
Same thing here in Singapore, kids speak English - taught in school, a lot of old folks though never learned it. (Yeah of course only takes a bit more effort to communicate - not going hungry here either - that was more of a joke.) China is getting that way too (despite the fact worldwide Mandarin is bigger then English). Seems only Japanese (pride) and French (arrogance - even when they can understand it) avoid English.
Best "English" speakers I found were in Norway (younger ones), in fact they spoke it better (more correctly) than the Brits. We all know native speakers are lazy, "can I have a ..." when they meant "may I" ... (I'm sure all languages have stuff this too) - somehow the Norwegians got English without the lazy.
not knowing a language has it's advantages too, I'd always smile through a tirade of complaints about me to my wife from my mother in law - yeah I got the jist from the tone and amount of times my name was repeated, and always thoroughly enjoyed it.
pestilence [ pes-tl-uh ns ] noun
1. a deadly or virulent epidemic disease. especially bubonic plague.
2. something that is considered harmful, destructive, or evil.
Synonyms: pest, plague, CCP
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It is worth noticing that every time you refer to the mouse in Norwegian, it has a similar secondary meaning. (You can imagine how we sometimes refer to the scroll wheel.)
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Also Norwegian, where it means edge (of a counter, for example).
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And that's where you meet the Moose
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Kant or Wont?
When you talk, you are only repeating what you already know.
But if you listen, you may learn something new.
--Dalai Lama
JaxCoder.com
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Maybe it affects your religious beliefs if ...
- God be with you!
- Can't!
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"If you seek a roué to irk your aunt,
Kubla-Khan but Immanuel Kant,"
(Nash, "Versus")
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Is capital or fishy business. (11)
Software rusts. Simon Stephenson, ca 1994. So does this signature. me, 2012
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I won't post the answer as I've done one this week but I don't get the business part
"We can't stop here - this is bat country" - Hunter S Thompson - RIP
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