ask dog latin

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Where the party at?

Crackle Box, Monday, 13 August 2012 12:14 (eleven years ago) link

my house 25th of Aug

sorry for asshole (dog latin), Monday, 13 August 2012 12:19 (eleven years ago) link

How frequently do you use the phrase 'shiver me timbers!'?

I've been to Suffolk (Nasty, Brutish & Short), Monday, 13 August 2012 13:04 (eleven years ago) link

You are at a clearing in a forest. To your right is a small cave. To your left a path rises up a hill, and you can hear a babbling brook. Directly in front of you a small gnome wearing orange pantaloons sits weaving something.

What do you do?

Know how Roo feel (LocalGarda), Monday, 13 August 2012 13:06 (eleven years ago) link

When The Proclaimers sang "I can understand why Stranraer lie so lowly, they could save a lot of points by signing Hibs' goalie" how did you react?

I've been to Suffolk (Nasty, Brutish & Short), Monday, 13 August 2012 13:11 (eleven years ago) link

If, due to an improbable misunderstanding, you found yourself obliged to spend a month driving around Britain visiting every single motorway service station while dressed as spiderman, would you eat your lunch each day at the fast food establishments therein, or would you be tempted to make your own sandwiches and buy some fruit from a mini supermarket?

I've been to Suffolk (Nasty, Brutish & Short), Monday, 13 August 2012 13:19 (eleven years ago) link

You're at the prow of a ship, a storm is rising. The crew haven't been fed in weeks and a mutiny seems certain. You have one leg.

What do you do?

Know how Roo feel (LocalGarda), Monday, 13 August 2012 13:19 (eleven years ago) link

How frequently do you use the phrase 'shiver me timbers!'?

― I've been to Suffolk (Nasty, Brutish & Short), Monday, 13 August 2012 14:04 (20 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

Rarely/Never

You are at a clearing in a forest. To your right is a small cave. To your left a path rises up a hill, and you can hear a babbling brook. Directly in front of you a small gnome wearing orange pantaloons sits weaving something.

What do you do?

― Know how Roo feel (LocalGarda), Monday, 13 August 2012 14:06 (18 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

>Eat gnome

When The Proclaimers sang "I can understand why Stranraer lie so lowly, they could save a lot of points by signing Hibs' goalie" how did you react?

― I've been to Suffolk (Nasty, Brutish & Short), Monday, 13 August 2012 14:11 (13 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

I don't know this song by the Proclaimers. I prefer Sunshine On Leith and King of the Road.

If, due to an improbable misunderstanding, you found yourself obliged to spend a month driving around Britain visiting every single motorway service station while dressed as spiderman, would you eat your lunch each day at the fast food establishments therein, or would you be tempted to make your own sandwiches and buy some fruit from a mini supermarket?

― I've been to Suffolk (Nasty, Brutish & Short), Monday, 13 August 2012 14:19 (5 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

I would definitely make my own sandwiches as shop-bought sandwiches are full of salt - especially petrol station sandwiches which are ghastly.

You're at the prow of a ship, a storm is rising. The crew haven't been fed in weeks and a mutiny seems certain. You have one leg.

What do you do?

― Know how Roo feel (LocalGarda), Monday, 13 August 2012 14:19 (5 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

Get horrifically pissed.

sorry for asshole (dog latin), Monday, 13 August 2012 13:29 (eleven years ago) link

Is this as much fun as you'd hoped?

Ismael Klata, Monday, 13 August 2012 13:41 (eleven years ago) link

it passes the time.

sorry for asshole (dog latin), Monday, 13 August 2012 13:42 (eleven years ago) link

If, on a winter's night, a traveller should come to your door and, after consulting with his wife, a haggard woman wrapped in the kind of blanket furniture-removals companies use to insulate pianos from the sides of their vans, although whether principally to protect their vehicles or the music instruments themselves is an interesting question, and one I had reason to examine in detail from a legal point of view when, during my own house removal a year ago, from Bahrain to a small island near Iceland (the supermarket, not the country), I noticed some scratch marks on the side of my own Bösendorfer, which, by the way, means "evil townsperson", an odd brand for a piano, albeit one made by a company now wholly-owned by Yamaha, once known in Britain mainly for their motorcycles but now somewhat unfocussed, with a product portfolio embracing everything from digital leaf-blowers to flatscreen spearguns and plasma dentures, a development all too familiar now to those of us who follow the fortunes of the large Japanese electronics companies, which are crumbling with alarming rapidity into irrelevance, in connection with which, by the way, I read recently that Sony no longer figures even amongst the top fifty Japanese companies by market capitalisation, and I must admit that there's been a sharp decline in my own use of the PlayStation recently, although that may have something to do with the repetitive strain injury that made my right arm seize up entirely the day after my 112th birthday, but, to retrace my steps (because I'm aware that this question is starting to get a little confusing, with all the complex syntax and the various branching subclauses linked into the flow of the sentence by conjunctions like "notwithstanding", notwithstanding the fact that I hadn't used "notwithstanding" right up until this parenthetical and meta-ouroborositical, if that's even a word, yes, meta-ourobositical example, damn it, spell-checker, stop underlining these words in red when they're perfectly valid, everybody knows that the ouroboros is the snake that swallows its own tail, and that if there is an adjectival form of the word it would be following perfectly normal English practice for it to be something like "ourobositical", on the model of "parasitical", or perhaps simply "ourobositic", I think I'll close my parentheses here), as I was saying, to retrace my steps - and I hope you're still reading this, Dog Latin, though I could certainly understand that you might have better things to do with your time, like for instance watching paint dry in one of those interesting BBC home make-over programmes which, in retrospect, were the sparkling film on the flimsy property bubble from which we all either profited or lost out, but, to get back to the gypsies on your driveway, or, to be more precise, the travellers on your driveway, on a winter's night, would you - to put this finally in the form of a question you might conceivably be able to answer, though I'm certainly not expecting, let alone demanding, a reply from you, even if you have set things up in a semi-challenge format with a kind of "I will answer all questions posed" structure, though, granted, with an added caveat that questions about your genitals will not be answered, or at least not with any serious statistics, though perhaps some lighthearted banter such as might be encountered in a pub lavatory when, thinking we're alone at the urinal, we are joined by an unwholesome fellow who insists - when there is plenty of spare room and even adjacent urinals whose plumbing arrangements are entirely separate from the one we are using, though of course he may be a homosexual and be choosing this place of proximity deliberately in order to study our genitals at the closest-possible socially-acceptable range, and even to catch a whiff of their particular odour and flavour - lighthearted banter, I say, resembling the kind that we will probably start to engage in ourselves in order to defuse the palpable sexual tension now hanging in the air and preventing our fleshy nozzles from discharging their payload of micturant waste, in the hypothetical scenario I embarked upon a few lines back and now wish, to be frank, I hadn't broached, for I have, if truth be told, some hangups of my own in that department, but fortunately, Dog Latin, you have already ruled "out of bounds" all references to that private organ, and therefore I will retrace my steps, as promised, eschewing all mention of the skull, the skull in Connemara, no, wait, that's not right, all reference to the evil townsfolk who live inside the damaged piano for which, I meant to reveal, I was paid the princely sum of £1500 in compensation damages in the court of assizes, that being, in the judge's view (and he was a keen amateur pianist himself, though I do not intend any smutty double entendres when I use the term "pianist", given the ban on genital references under which we are all currently working), the actual diminution in the value of my Austrian piano, consequent upon its damage by the ribald men in blue smocks whose cavalier attitude, I must say, would have irritated me enormously had I not, at some no doubt subconscious level, found them rather attractive in a roguish way, and spent perhaps a little too long watching them from my rapidly-emptying study, pretending to read my battered copy of The Anathemata by David Jones, the Welsh poet, I mean, not the late David Jones of The Monkees, or David Robert Jones of Brixton, who later changed his name to Bowie, and was, like me, a bisexual who never had a homosexual experience, unless we believe his bitter ex-wife who, in her memoir, claims to have found him in bed with the man he called "Mike" Jagger, since apparently everybody who knows Mick calls him "Mike" rather than "Mick", and in fact, laughs out loud whenever they hear people refer to him as "Mick", the way friends of Dr Henry Jekyll might when hearing someone refer to him as "Hyde", but, to return to my question, Dog Latin, and bring it to its fruitful conclusion, as the Very Reverend Laurence Sterne would perhaps put it, when referring to his father's twin habits of winding the clock and enjoying his wife, in that order, so that his wife, upon hearing the clock being wound, would, by pre-Pavlovian association, know that the chores and labours of conception - but the conception, in this instance, of a future literary hero, though one whose birth is never reached, due to the structure of the narrative itself, and its infuriating habit of taking two steps back for every one forward - awaited her mere minutes after, as soon as her husband had extinguished the candle and climbed into bed with her, but where were we, ah yes, the skull in Connemara, no, wait, the gypsies upon the path coming up to your door, Dog Latin, but I insist I never specified they were gypsies, for that is a despicable racialist appellation, but merely travellers, cold on a winter's night and no doubt desirous of some shelter in your garden, perhaps a comfortable spot beneath your trellises, should you in fact have trellises, or perhaps merely a grassy knoll which would give their gaily decorated caravan - and I don't mean to imply that they have one, because, remember, I have been scrupulously careful not to insist that they were Romany people, let alone stereotypical Romany people or, heaven forfend, "gypsies", a term, by the way, I abhor, but, and I want to pose this question in the clearest and simplest way I know how, Dog Latin, is it your general feeling that these are people you wish to assist with shelter, in a samaritarian way, and I see my spellchecker has spattered dotted red lines - the textual equivalent of screaming blue murder - beneath the adjective "samaritarian", but it seems to me entirely logical that, should there be such a thing as a generic samaritan, then to behave like him must surely be "samaritarian", but again the blood spatters beneath the word, and again I am staring into the empty sockets of the skull, the skull in Connemara, so I will simply conclude, as directly as I can, with the appeal to your samaritarian... but no, no, I cannot stand the blood, the rising tide of typographic blood is drowning my subordinate clauses one by one, all is disorder, this sentence is sinking fast to the grammatical equivalent of Davy Jones' locker, and I now realise I should have included that Davy Jones in my list as well, don't you think, Dog Latin?

Grampsy, Monday, 13 August 2012 13:47 (eleven years ago) link

When will there be a harvest for all the world?

I've been to Suffolk (Nasty, Brutish & Short), Monday, 13 August 2012 14:12 (eleven years ago) link

If, on a winter's night, a traveller should come to your door and, after consulting with his wife, a haggard woman wrapped in the kind of blanket furniture-removals companies use to insulate pianos from the sides of their vans, although whether principally to protect their vehicles or the music instruments themselves is an interesting question, and one I had reason to examine in detail from a legal point of view when, during my own house removal a year ago, from Bahrain to a small island near Iceland (the supermarket, not the country), I noticed some scratch marks on the side of my own Bösendorfer, which, by the way, means "evil townsperson", an odd brand for a piano, albeit one made by a company now wholly-owned by Yamaha, once known in Britain mainly for their motorcycles but now somewhat unfocussed, with a product portfolio embracing everything from digital leaf-blowers to flatscreen spearguns and plasma dentures, a development all too familiar now to those of us who follow the fortunes of the large Japanese electronics companies, which are crumbling with alarming rapidity into irrelevance, in connection with which, by the way, I read recently that Sony no longer figures even amongst the top fifty Japanese companies by market capitalisation, and I must admit that there's been a sharp decline in my own use of the PlayStation recently, although that may have something to do with the repetitive strain injury that made my right arm seize up entirely the day after my 112th birthday, but, to retrace my steps (because I'm aware that this question is starting to get a little confusing, with all the complex syntax and the various branching subclauses linked into the flow of the sentence by conjunctions like "notwithstanding", notwithstanding the fact that I hadn't used "notwithstanding" right up until this parenthetical and meta-ouroborositical, if that's even a word, yes, meta-ourobositical example, damn it, spell-checker, stop underlining these words in red when they're perfectly valid, everybody knows that the ouroboros is the snake that swallows its own tail, and that if there is an adjectival form of the word it would be following perfectly normal English practice for it to be something like "ourobositical", on the model of "parasitical", or perhaps simply "ourobositic", I think I'll close my parentheses here), as I was saying, to retrace my steps - and I hope you're still reading this, Dog Latin, though I could certainly understand that you might have better things to do with your time, like for instance watching paint dry in one of those interesting BBC home make-over programmes which, in retrospect, were the sparkling film on the flimsy property bubble from which we all either profited or lost out, but, to get back to the gypsies on your driveway, or, to be more precise, the travellers on your driveway, on a winter's night, would you - to put this finally in the form of a question you might conceivably be able to answer, though I'm certainly not expecting, let alone demanding, a reply from you, even if you have set things up in a semi-challenge format with a kind of "I will answer all questions posed" structure, though, granted, with an added caveat that questions about your genitals will not be answered, or at least not with any serious statistics, though perhaps some lighthearted banter such as might be encountered in a pub lavatory when, thinking we're alone at the urinal, we are joined by an unwholesome fellow who insists - when there is plenty of spare room and even adjacent urinals whose plumbing arrangements are entirely separate from the one we are using, though of course he may be a homosexual and be choosing this place of proximity deliberately in order to study our genitals at the closest-possible socially-acceptable range, and even to catch a whiff of their particular odour and flavour - lighthearted banter, I say, resembling the kind that we will probably start to engage in ourselves in order to defuse the palpable sexual tension now hanging in the air and preventing our fleshy nozzles from discharging their payload of micturant waste, in the hypothetical scenario I embarked upon a few lines back and now wish, to be frank, I hadn't broached, for I have, if truth be told, some hangups of my own in that department, but fortunately, Dog Latin, you have already ruled "out of bounds" all references to that private organ, and therefore I will retrace my steps, as promised, eschewing all mention of the skull, the skull in Connemara, no, wait, that's not right, all reference to the evil townsfolk who live inside the damaged piano for which, I meant to reveal, I was paid the princely sum of £1500 in compensation damages in the court of assizes, that being, in the judge's view (and he was a keen amateur pianist himself, though I do not intend any smutty double entendres when I use the term "pianist", given the ban on genital references under which we are all currently working), the actual diminution in the value of my Austrian piano, consequent upon its damage by the ribald men in blue smocks whose cavalier attitude, I must say, would have irritated me enormously had I not, at some no doubt subconscious level, found them rather attractive in a roguish way, and spent perhaps a little too long watching them from my rapidly-emptying study, pretending to read my battered copy of The Anathemata by David Jones, the Welsh poet, I mean, not the late David Jones of The Monkees, or David Robert Jones of Brixton, who later changed his name to Bowie, and was, like me, a bisexual who never had a homosexual experience, unless we believe his bitter ex-wife who, in her memoir, claims to have found him in bed with the man he called "Mike" Jagger, since apparently everybody who knows Mick calls him "Mike" rather than "Mick", and in fact, laughs out loud whenever they hear people refer to him as "Mick", the way friends of Dr Henry Jekyll might when hearing someone refer to him as "Hyde", but, to return to my question, Dog Latin, and bring it to its fruitful conclusion, as the Very Reverend Laurence Sterne would perhaps put it, when referring to his father's twin habits of winding the clock and enjoying his wife, in that order, so that his wife, upon hearing the clock being wound, would, by pre-Pavlovian association, know that the chores and labours of conception - but the conception, in this instance, of a future literary hero, though one whose birth is never reached, due to the structure of the narrative itself, and its infuriating habit of taking two steps back for every one forward - awaited her mere minutes after, as soon as her husband had extinguished the candle and climbed into bed with her, but where were we, ah yes, the skull in Connemara, no, wait, the gypsies upon the path coming up to your door, Dog Latin, but I insist I never specified they were gypsies, for that is a despicable racialist appellation, but merely travellers, cold on a winter's night and no doubt desirous of some shelter in your garden, perhaps a comfortable spot beneath your trellises, should you in fact have trellises, or perhaps merely a grassy knoll which would give their gaily decorated caravan - and I don't mean to imply that they have one, because, remember, I have been scrupulously careful not to insist that they were Romany people, let alone stereotypical Romany people or, heaven forfend, "gypsies", a term, by the way, I abhor, but, and I want to pose this question in the clearest and simplest way I know how, Dog Latin, is it your general feeling that these are people you wish to assist with shelter, in a samaritarian way, and I see my spellchecker has spattered dotted red lines - the textual equivalent of screaming blue murder - beneath the adjective "samaritarian", but it seems to me entirely logical that, should there be such a thing as a generic samaritan, then to behave like him must surely be "samaritarian", but again the blood spatters beneath the word, and again I am staring into the empty sockets of the skull, the skull in Connemara, so I will simply conclude, as directly as I can, with the appeal to your samaritarian... but no, no, I cannot stand the blood, the rising tide of typographic blood is drowning my subordinate clauses one by one, all is disorder, this sentence is sinking fast to the grammatical equivalent of Davy Jones' locker, and I now realise I should have included that Davy Jones in my list as well, don't you think, Dog Latin?

― Grampsy, Monday, 13 August 2012 14:47 (24 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

If Davy Jones counts, does http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dafydd_Jones count?

sorry for asshole (dog latin), Monday, 13 August 2012 14:17 (eleven years ago) link

When will there be a harvest for all the world?

― I've been to Suffolk (Nasty, Brutish & Short), Monday, 13 August 2012 15:12 (11 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

Never. At least, not simultaneously seeing as harvest time / harvest festival is celebrated at different times of the year in different countries. This is not necessarily a bad thing as the global homogenisation of harvest would lead to many countries picking their crops at an inopportune time.

sorry for asshole (dog latin), Monday, 13 August 2012 14:28 (eleven years ago) link

When asked what your height is do you insist on giving a measurement in nautical miles?

I've been to Suffolk (Nasty, Brutish & Short), Monday, 13 August 2012 14:31 (eleven years ago) link

i am exactly 1/2 of a knot off my target weight.

sorry for asshole (dog latin), Monday, 13 August 2012 14:38 (eleven years ago) link

Now you're Winston Churchill in charge of a small monastery on the island of Corsica.

Know how Roo feel (LocalGarda), Monday, 13 August 2012 15:23 (eleven years ago) link

Sorry I have no question.

Know how Roo feel (LocalGarda), Monday, 13 August 2012 15:24 (eleven years ago) link

that's okay ronan. you don't have to have a question.

sorry for asshole (dog latin), Monday, 13 August 2012 15:30 (eleven years ago) link

have you learned you lesson?

coal, Monday, 13 August 2012 17:03 (eleven years ago) link

Ask a silly question, get a silly question?

sorry for asshole (dog latin), Monday, 13 August 2012 17:17 (eleven years ago) link

When did you 'get' it? If you ever got it.

Ismael Klata, Monday, 13 August 2012 17:29 (eleven years ago) link

from the moment i got asked how big my cock was.

sorry for asshole (dog latin), Tuesday, 14 August 2012 08:31 (eleven years ago) link

Would 'ask sick mouthy' be a worthwhile thread?

Sick Mouthy (Scik Mouthy), Tuesday, 14 August 2012 09:49 (eleven years ago) link

yes.

sorry for asshole (dog latin), Tuesday, 14 August 2012 09:51 (eleven years ago) link

If we told you that we wanted you to star in the pilot of a new TV programme in which you would be driven to a remote location in the Scottish Highlands and then abandoned, left alone without money, food, transport or means of communication and had to make your own way home (working title Hitchin' to Hitchin) and you agreed to this, thinking it would be open many doors to a future TV-based career, but then shortly after being abandoned you realised there was no TV crew and you had fallen victim to a cruel practical joke, how would you feel?

I've been to Suffolk (Nasty, Brutish & Short), Tuesday, 14 August 2012 09:58 (eleven years ago) link

I'd feel better if you'd called it Scrangling from Hitchin

http://www.progarchives.com/progressive_rock_discography_covers/1758/cover_51821582005.jpg

But that notwithstanding, I'm sure you could appreciate I'd be kind of pissed off but thankful for the exercise and time away from work.

sorry for asshole (dog latin), Tuesday, 14 August 2012 10:03 (eleven years ago) link

Should we kill healthy people for their organs?

Sick Mouthy (Scik Mouthy), Tuesday, 14 August 2012 10:19 (eleven years ago) link

How much money would you have to be offered to agree to shoehorn the phrase "outside of the narrow confines of the world of amateur chess" into every conversation you have (no matter how short) with every single person that you meet (no matter how short) during the calendar year of 2013?

I've been to Suffolk (Nasty, Brutish & Short), Tuesday, 14 August 2012 10:21 (eleven years ago) link

if you have a wooden table, which is of a simple composition including a table top and four legs which screw in, and one leg is scratched so you replace it, keeping the scrached leg in a cupboard, and then anopther leg gets scratched and you replace that one, keeping the second scratched leg in the same cupboard, and then you replace the next two legs for the same reason, keeping the next two scratched legs, and then the table top gets scratched so you replace that too, and keep the original top, and then you reassemble the old elements of the table next to the table, which table is the table?

Sick Mouthy (Scik Mouthy), Tuesday, 14 August 2012 10:22 (eleven years ago) link

Could the Norse Greenland colonies have survived, and indeed in time expanded southwards? What would America be like now if they had? (detailed response please, nothing glib)

Ismael Klata, Tuesday, 14 August 2012 10:40 (eleven years ago) link

Are the delays to the construction of Malaysia's Kuching Tower warranted?

Know how Roo feel (LocalGarda), Tuesday, 14 August 2012 10:43 (eleven years ago) link

Are you still mates with the 65dos blokes?

Pureed Moods (Trayce), Tuesday, 14 August 2012 10:48 (eleven years ago) link

Does the smell of petroleum pervade throughout?

kmfdotm (ledge), Tuesday, 14 August 2012 10:48 (eleven years ago) link

What's the single best moment of When The Levee Breaks?

Ismael Klata, Tuesday, 14 August 2012 10:57 (eleven years ago) link

In 1981 the first Thatcher-led Tory government was deeply unpopular. The monetarist policy they were pursuing was having catastrophic economic effects, unemployment was rising to unprecedented levels and riots were breaking out all over the country. Meanwhile as the Labour party lurched to the left some split from it and formed the SDP. Polls during that time were notoriously volatile, but Labour was generally ahead of the Conservatives and for a brief period the SDP were the most popular party in the country. In 1982 the Falklands effect saw Thatcher's popularity soar and the Tories gained a landslide victory in 1983. After this they embarked on a massive programme of privitisation, hugely curbed union powers and defeated the NUM in a lengthy and bitter battle, and introduced market-led economic reforms that radically changed the face of Britain. Were the changes that took place in Britain in the 80s and 90s a historical inevitability or would the country be a very different place now if the Falklands War had never happened and either Michael Foot's Labour or David Owen's SDP had won the 1983 election? If the latter, how? (no detailed answers, please, just glib ones)

I've been to Suffolk (Nasty, Brutish & Short), Tuesday, 14 August 2012 11:00 (eleven years ago) link

Could the Norse Greenland colonies have survived, and indeed in time expanded southwards? What would America be like now if they had? (detailed response please, nothing glib)

― Ismael Klata, Tuesday, 14 August 2012 11:40 (3 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

I'm not entirely au fait with the history of Viking settlements in the new world. Didn't some of it make it as far as Newfoundland and New England? And wasn't it theorised up until not that long ago that perhaps the indigenous people of America could have at least in part been ancestrally related to Norse settlers? Who's to say there wasn't any co-mingling between those early explorers and their new skraeling compadres? Are there not at least superficial similarities between Lap shamans and the ceremonial garb worn by certain American tribes? Discounting these hypotheses, and to answer your question, it's kind of too hard to say as the historical links between Nordic countries, Greenland and the rest of the Americas seem to have operated in waves, with many communities living isolated from their homelands for several years. Must also not discount the harsh climate of those territories which could not have been changed and would certainly have proved the biggest influence on whether these outposts were to thrive or fail. But again, I'm no expert at all and this is all made up of random things I've read here and there.

sorry for asshole (dog latin), Tuesday, 14 August 2012 11:07 (eleven years ago) link

Are you still mates with the 65dos blokes?

― Pureed Moods (Trayce), Tuesday, 14 August 2012 11:48 (18 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

Not really. I'm not enemies with them, just haven't met any of them since about 2007.

sorry for asshole (dog latin), Tuesday, 14 August 2012 11:07 (eleven years ago) link

Should we kill healthy people for their organs?

― Sick Mouthy (Scik Mouthy), Tuesday, 14 August 2012 11:19 (48 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

Depends on whether they piss me off or not.

sorry for asshole (dog latin), Tuesday, 14 August 2012 11:08 (eleven years ago) link

How much money would you have to be offered to agree to shoehorn the phrase "outside of the narrow confines of the world of amateur chess" into every conversation you have (no matter how short) with every single person that you meet (no matter how short) during the calendar year of 2013?

― I've been to Suffolk (Nasty, Brutish & Short), Tuesday, 14 August 2012 11:21 (46 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

Think I would agree to a £184,000,000 agreement, but secretly I'd only do it when people were paying attention.

sorry for asshole (dog latin), Tuesday, 14 August 2012 11:09 (eleven years ago) link

if you have a wooden table, which is of a simple composition including a table top and four legs which screw in, and one leg is scratched so you replace it, keeping the scrached leg in a cupboard, and then anopther leg gets scratched and you replace that one, keeping the second scratched leg in the same cupboard, and then you replace the next two legs for the same reason, keeping the next two scratched legs, and then the table top gets scratched so you replace that too, and keep the original top, and then you reassemble the old elements of the table next to the table, which table is the table?

― Sick Mouthy (Scik Mouthy), Tuesday, 14 August 2012 11:22 (47 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

In Soviet Russia the table is you.

sorry for asshole (dog latin), Tuesday, 14 August 2012 11:10 (eleven years ago) link

What's the single best moment of When The Levee Breaks?

― Ismael Klata, Tuesday, 14 August 2012 11:57 (14 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

I like the bit where the levee actually breaks.

sorry for asshole (dog latin), Tuesday, 14 August 2012 11:12 (eleven years ago) link

Does the smell of petroleum pervade throughout?

― kmfdotm (ledge), Tuesday, 14 August 2012 11:48 (23 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

42

sorry for asshole (dog latin), Tuesday, 14 August 2012 11:15 (eleven years ago) link

What is the funniest thing you have ever said? Please give an honest answer.

Eyeball Kicks, Tuesday, 14 August 2012 11:17 (eleven years ago) link

What is the funniest thing you have ever said? Please give an honest answer.

― Eyeball Kicks, Tuesday, 14 August 2012 12:17 (24 seconds ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

- They're like Green Day but slower

sorry for asshole (dog latin), Tuesday, 14 August 2012 11:20 (eleven years ago) link

Did you have to be there?

Ismael Klata, Tuesday, 14 August 2012 11:22 (eleven years ago) link

I have an unanswered question

I've been to Suffolk (Nasty, Brutish & Short), Tuesday, 14 August 2012 11:22 (eleven years ago) link

Did you have to be there?

― Ismael Klata, Tuesday, 14 August 2012 12:22 (3 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

To be honest I don't think it's the funniest thing I've said. I think that was a lie.

I have an unanswered question

― I've been to Suffolk (Nasty, Brutish & Short), Tuesday, 14 August 2012 12:22 (3 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

i'm getting to you.

sorry for asshole (dog latin), Tuesday, 14 August 2012 11:28 (eleven years ago) link

In 1981 the first Thatcher-led Tory government was deeply unpopular. The monetarist policy they were pursuing was having catastrophic economic effects, unemployment was rising to unprecedented levels and riots were breaking out all over the country. Meanwhile as the Labour party lurched to the left some split from it and formed the SDP. Polls during that time were notoriously volatile, but Labour was generally ahead of the Conservatives and for a brief period the SDP were the most popular party in the country. In 1982 the Falklands effect saw Thatcher's popularity soar and the Tories gained a landslide victory in 1983. After this they embarked on a massive programme of privitisation, hugely curbed union powers and defeated the NUM in a lengthy and bitter battle, and introduced market-led economic reforms that radically changed the face of Britain. Were the changes that took place in Britain in the 80s and 90s a historical inevitability or would the country be a very different place now if the Falklands War had never happened and either Michael Foot's Labour or David Owen's SDP had won the 1983 election? If the latter, how? (no detailed answers, please, just glib ones)

― I've been to Suffolk (Nasty, Brutish & Short), Tuesday, 14 August 2012 12:00 (28 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

We would all be dyeing our clothes grey and shouting at books.

sorry for asshole (dog latin), Tuesday, 14 August 2012 11:29 (eleven years ago) link


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