B) You expect me to actually remember the things I say and do?
Posted: Fri Jan 15, 2021 3:16 am
by Luca Blight
Intent to hammer
Posted: Fri Jan 15, 2021 3:18 am
by Not_Mafia
What's the point of intent? He claimed already
Posted: Fri Jan 15, 2021 3:19 am
by Luca Blight
What's your legacy reads, in case you die?
Posted: Fri Jan 15, 2021 3:24 am
by Not_Mafia
Titus- Lean town
Vaxkiller- null
DrippingGoofball- Town
Momrangal- Town
quiet- Scum
Bypasser Catcher- Town
Rannygazoo- Scum
Luca Blight- Town
Binatog13- Lean scum
Norfolk Boy1- Scum
NorwegianboyEE- Town
Gamma Emerald- Lean scum
BBMolla- Lean town
chkflip- Lean scum
PlusJOYED- Scum
Hayker- Scum
Andresvmb- Town
Posted: Fri Jan 15, 2021 3:32 am
by Luca Blight
VOTE: Norfolk Boy1
Posted: Fri Jan 15, 2021 3:35 am
by NorwegianboyEE
Was that hammer?
Posted: Fri Jan 15, 2021 3:37 am
by NorwegianboyEE
Ok it was.
I probably would have voted Norfolk Boy myself so here’s to hoping N_M hasn’t been trolling us again.
Posted: Fri Jan 15, 2021 3:37 am
by Not_Mafia
Ayup
Posted: Fri Jan 15, 2021 3:38 am
by Vaxkiller
I can't believe I'm saying this, but I think im wrong about N_M. THose posts to non-existing dr noises.
Posted: Fri Jan 15, 2021 3:38 am
by Not_Mafia
I'm actually an Odd Night Loyal Checker, my action on Norfolk last night failed
Posted: Fri Jan 15, 2021 3:40 am
by Vaxkiller
Also I was thiking alot about all this on my way to work, we need to look at the mini-mega wagon yesterday, im thinking scum were on that wagon. I think they made a mistake shooting there and exposed themselves.
Abstract sense of "time as an indefinite continuous duration" is recorded from late 14c. Personified at least since 1509 as an aged bald man (but with a forelock) carrying a scythe and an hour-glass. In English, a single word encompasses time as "extent" and "point" (French
temps/fois
, German
zeit/mal
) as well as "hour" (as in "what time is it?" compare French
heure
, German
Uhr
). Extended senses such as "occasion," "the right time," "leisure," or
times (v.)
"multiplied by" developed in Old and Middle English, probably as a natural outgrowth of such phrases as "He commends her a hundred times to God" (Old French
La comande a Deu cent foiz
).
to have a good time
( = a time of enjoyment) was common in Eng. from c 1520 to c 1688; it was app. retained in America, whence readopted in Britain in 19th c. [OED]
Time of day
(now mainly preserved in negation, i.e. what someone won't give you if he doesn't like you) was a popular 17c. salutation (as in "Good time of day vnto your Royall Grace," "Richard III," I.iii.18), hence
to give (one) the time of day
"greet socially" (1590s); earlier was
give good day
(mid-14c.).
The times "
the current age" is from 1590s.
Behind the times
"old-fashioned" is recorded from 1831.
Times
as the name of a newspaper dates from 1788.
Time warp
first attested 1954;
time-traveling
in the science fiction sense first recorded 1895 in H.G. Wells' "The Time Machine."
Time capsule
first recorded 1938, in reference to the one "deemed capable of resisting the effects of time for five thousand years preserving an account of universal achievements embedded in the grounds of the New York World's fair."
Jones [archaeologist of A.D. 5139] potters about for a while in the region which we have come to regard as New York, finds countless ruins, but little of interest to the historian except a calcified direction sheet to something called a "Time Capsule." Jones finds the capsule but cannot open it, and decides, after considerable prying at the lid, that it is merely evidence of an archaic tribal ceremony called a "publicity gag" of which he has already found many examples. [Princeton Alumni Weekly, April 14, 1939]
To do time
"serve a prison sentence" is from 1865.
Time frame
is attested by 1964;
time-limit
is from 1880.
About time
, ironically for "long past due time," is recorded from 1920. To