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Message started by gitarzan on 04/29/05 at 20:31:29

Title: A little something different for the weekend...
Post by gitarzan on 04/29/05 at 20:31:29

Check this out.  It's from the Seoul Animation Festival (SICAF) a few years ago.  It's a big DL, but well worth the wait.
http://extra.waag.org/users/aske/moviez/sicaf_sand.wmv

Here's another one of my favorites:
http://mismedia.net/media/funny_cats_1.asf

Just something different.  :)

Title: Re: A little something different for the weekend..
Post by gitarzan on 04/29/05 at 20:41:56

More:

http://nerdysouth.com/flash/mini%20putt.swf

Title: Re: A little something different for the weekend..
Post by gitarzan on 04/29/05 at 20:46:41

For the unemployed:
http://nerdysouth.com/flash/day%20of%20no%20job.swf

Title: Re: A little something different for the weekend..
Post by gitarzan on 04/29/05 at 20:57:36

To whom it may concern...

http://nerdysouth.com/flash/eat%20my%20balls.swf

you'll have to cut and paste the url.  It doesn't like being linked to.

Title: Re: A little something different for the weekend..
Post by shawn_b on 04/29/05 at 20:58:56

cool game

shawn

Title: Re: A little something different for the weekend..
Post by gitarzan on 04/29/05 at 21:00:06

http://nerdysouth.com/flash/hand%20clock.swf

Title: Re: A little something different for the weekend..
Post by gazab44 on 04/30/05 at 02:35:40

Kewl.....see why i dont play golf now

Title: Re: A little something different for the weekend..
Post by red2k1 on 04/30/05 at 05:01:33

The Seoul Animation is simply extraordinary!

Title: Re: A little something different for the weekend..
Post by bobo383 on 04/30/05 at 19:05:03

Absolutely amazing - mind blowing Seoul link.  And I was sober watching it.

However the putput 18th hole is a pregnant dog.  I had to go to the garage to find a putter to throw.

Title: Re: A little something different for the weekend..
Post by bobo383 on 04/30/05 at 19:06:24


bobo383 wrote:
Absolutely amazing - mind blowing Seoul link.  And I was sober watching it.

However the putput 18th hole is a pregnant dog.  I had to go to the garage to find a putter to throw.


How do ya like that - b1tch is censored as "pregnant dog".  Hmmm.


Title: Re: A little something different for the weekend..
Post by LondonThing on 05/01/05 at 06:53:24


bobo383 wrote:


How do ya like that - b1tch is censored as "pregnant dog".  Hmmm.


I thought a b1tch was a female dog, not nessaceraly a pregnant one ?? Whats up with that?, I know its a default on YaBB. theres some really funny ones set by default, but i wont go into them... lol

Title: Re: A little something different for the weekend..
Post by gazab44 on 05/01/05 at 07:12:31


LondonThing wrote:


I thought a b1tch was a female dog, not nessaceraly a pregnant one ?? Whats up with that?, I know its a default on YaBB. theres some really funny ones set by default, but i wont go into them... lol


here you are...if you can understand it let me know LOL

Where does the term pregnant dog "female dog" come from and how did it get applied to women?
The word originally referred to female animals, especially dogs.  It dates from about 1000 in the Old English written record and was bicce.  Beyond that, etymologists cannot really say very much with authority.  There is an Old Norse word bikkja with the same meaning, but it is unclear whether it came from the Old English word, or vice versa, or whether they are cognate with one another (meaning they have a common source).  The OED suggests (by way of Jacob Grimm, German linguist and folklorist of the 19th century), that if the Old Norse word were the original, it may have come from Lappish pittja, though the Lappish word could have come from the Norse, too.  There is a German word betze (or petze), but word historians seem to think that it is simply the Germanized form of the English word.   Then there is French biche "pregnant dog" and "fawn", but whether those are related to each other and/or the English word is not known.  So, to sum up, we just don't know much about the word's earliest roots.

We can, however, see how pregnant dog came to be applied to women.  It was being used thus as early as 1400 and referred to a lewd or sensual woman.  It was not uncommon to use it in literature of the time in that sense.  It was simply a metaphor, comparing lewd women to female dogs, which, if left to their own devices, will bear pups rather frequently, suggesting sexual promiscuity.  The more modern meaning of "malicious or treacherous woman" seems to have arisen in the 19th century, and Kipling used it metaphorically (thus, etymologically using a double metaphor!) in Traffics & Discoveries: "After eight years, my father, cheated by your pregnant dog of a country, he found out who was the upper dog in South Africa" (1904).

If you were wondering, son of a pregnant dog (in the form pregnant dog-son) first appears in the written record in 1330 in Of Arthur & of Merlin, but we don't find it again until Shakespeare's time (1605) in King Lear: "One that...art nothing but the composition of a Knave, Begger, Coward, Pandar, and the Sonne and Heire of a Mungrill pregnant dog."



Title: Re: A little something different for the weekend..
Post by Mr 650 on 05/04/05 at 12:07:16

Cool, LMAO thanks for the link!
(I thought I was the only one that lived that way)


gitarzan wrote:
To whom it may concern...

http://nerdysouth.com/flash/eat%20my%20balls.swf

you'll have to cut and paste the url.  It doesn't like being linked to.



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