Posted: Wed Feb 03, 2021 6:51 am
And that I’m just bad lul
hayker, with 26 posts, likely killed Binatog who was their most certain townread.In post 4314, Hayker wrote:Vanilla Townie here. Glad Chk died in the night. Now where do we go from here. bina is almost certainly town. Would have to be another big gambit to not be. Would not be worth I think for mafia to try. Titus was too self confident in her reads. Even so I want to consider at least BB on her list of targets.
Luca Blight, Binatog13, Andresvmb, NorwegianboyEE, Momrangal, Gamma Emerald, DrippingGoofball
These are the final votes on Titus. From there I can whittle down to norwegian, andres, GE, Luca, mom, in that order of my suspicians.
VOTE: norwegianboy
Yeah no town vig would make either of those kills. And SKs were restricted in Mini/Micro Normals, not all normals.In post 4561, Luca Blight wrote:I guess there’s a SK then, as neither of those kills make sense coming from a vig.
Disappointing as I thought 3rd parties weren’t allowed in normals anymore.
In post 4218, Hayker wrote:Chk's roleclaim seems ridiculous. Doesn't even matter what I think of Titus anymore. Highly dislike all the name calling and insults. attack the play not the player.
Chk what are your investigations please. preferably before fade.
Does Hayker fit as the SK? Maybe?In post 4314, Hayker wrote:Vanilla Townie here. Glad Chk died in the night. Now where do we go from here. bina is almost certainly town. Would have to be another big gambit to not be. Would not be worth I think for mafia to try. Titus was too self confident in her reads. Even so I want to consider at least BB on her list of targets.
Luca Blight, Binatog13, Andresvmb, NorwegianboyEE, Momrangal, Gamma Emerald, DrippingGoofball
These are the final votes on Titus. From there I can whittle down to norwegian, andres, GE, Luca, mom, in that order of my suspicians.
VOTE: norwegianboy
Luca is full of posts like this.In post 3002, Luca Blight wrote:If I'm right about BBMolla/Momrangal then PlusJOYED is probably also scum due to the fact they didn't go anywhere near his wagon D1 when it was competing with NM, when it would have been so easy to push there.
It's particularly weird how BBMolla wanted a lurker elim, but never showed any interest in PlusJOYED, the biggest lurker of all, D1.
In post 3016, Luca Blight wrote:I can see a natural Townbloc emerging here:
Norwegian, DGB, Quiet, myself, maybe Gamma?
Andres, if he's able to reconcile this with his reads.
I think Vax is Town as well, but will need to review that quickly.
Interesting.In post 3017, Luca Blight wrote:Vax has towntold numerous times, I feel pretty good about that TR.
In post 3282, Luca Blight wrote:I'm not scumreading BBMolla for his AtE.
Well, I guess I am partially, but I was already hard SR'ing him before he ever AtE'd. Please catch-up properly before dismissing that wagon.
I very much keep coming back to this when I think of Luca.In post 3310, Luca Blight wrote:Conf-Town:Binatog
Almost conf-town:Momrangal
Town:Norwegian, Quiet
Very likely Town:Gamma, DGB, Vax, Hayker
----
Suspects:
plusJOYED
Andres
Chkflip
Titus
BBMolla
etymonline.org wrote:night (n.)
late Old Englishniht(West Saxonneaht, Angliannæht,neht) "the dark part of a day; the night as a unit of time; darkness," also "absence of spiritual illumination, moral darkness, ignorance," from Proto-Germanic*nahts(source also of Old Saxon and Old High Germannaht, Old Frisian and Dutchnacht, GermanNacht, Old Norsenatt, Gothicnahts).
The Germanic words are from PIE*nekwt-"night" (source also of Greeknyx"a night," Latinnox, Old Irishnochd, Sanskritnaktam"at night," Lithuaniannaktis"night," Old Church Slavonicnosti, Russiannoch', Welshhenoid"tonight"), according to Watkins, probably from a verbal root*neg-"to be dark, be night." For spelling with-gh-see . The vowel indicates that the modern English word derives from oblique cases (genitivenihte, dativeniht).
Thus in Old English combinationsThe fact that the Aryans have a common name for night, but not for day (q.v.), is due to the fact that they reckoned by nights. [Weekley]nightwas "the night before (a certain day or feast day);" compare GermanWeihnachten"Christmas," literally "holy night." In early times, the day was held to begin at sunset, so Old Englishmonanniht"Monday night" was the night before Monday, or what we would callSunday night. The Greeks, by contrast, counted their days by mornings.
Topreserves the Old English genitive of time.work nights"excrement" (1770) is so called because it was removed (from cesspools, etc.) after dark.Night soilis attested from 1838;Night trainfrom 1520s;night-school"habitual nocturnal carousing" is attested from 1852.night-life
etymonline.org wrote:four (adj., n.)
"1 more than three, twice two; the number which is one more than three; a symbol representing this number;" Old Englishfeower"four; four times," from Proto-Germanic*fedwores(source also of Old Saxonfiuwar, Old Frisianfiower,fiuwer, Frankish*fitter-, Dutchvier, Old High Germanfior, Germanvier, Old Norsefjorir, Danishfire, Swedishfyra, Gothicfidwor"four"), from PIE root "four." The phonetic evolution of the Germanic forms has not been fully explained; Watkins explains the-f-as being from the following number (Modern English five).
To beis from 1719; earlieron all fourson all four(14c.).as a euphemism for one of the short words generally regarded as offensive or objectionable is attested from 1923;Four-letter wordfour-letter manis recorded from 1920 (apparently as a euphemism fora shit). Compare Latinhomo trium litterarum, literally "three-letter man," a euphemism forfur"a thief." A(1793) was a carriage drawn by four horses driven by one person; in the sense of "loosely tied necktie" it is attested from 1892. To studyfour-in-handThe History of the Four Kings(1760, compare FrenchLivres des Quatre Rois) contains an old euphemistic slang phrase for "a pack of cards," from the time when card-playing was considered a wicked pastime for students. Slang"essential information" (by 1993) is from the telephone number called to get customer information. The4-1-1so called from 1879. Thefour-color problemwas attained 1954.four-minute mile