NinetyQ
NinetyQ
NinetyQ

Probably coincidence. Mine isn't on the same side as the E.

Come on, you usually do a better job of defending the clearly clickbait headlines. There is no real defense of this though. It says "body" in the headline, almost always (especially in news articles) meant to imply a corpse, and the video thumbnail appears to show just that in the road.

"In other news, Michael

"The upcoming coupe, yes coupe, that will be based on the the current ML class SUV will be called the GLE Coupe."

Call it what you want, but that's no coupe. Too many doors. That's just a crossover SUV with a sloping roof. They should have just called it the "GLE Sportback" or something like that.

That's a pretty pedantic point, really. With cars, pretty much all prices are asking prices, including with this Jaguar (note the Make An Offer option). So yes, $26,850 is "the price" of a moderately equipped Civic EX-L. Because what else are we going to use for reference? "Oh, my brother's girlfriend's friend once

Cry wolf? I'm not sure you're using that correctly since it describes what you're doing, not me.

I think "Bellend" was supposed to be used during the soccer match they had planned for the ending, which never happened. On public roads they needed to have the actual plates on the car. They removed the front plate for filming after the potential offense was made known to them.

What did they "do anyway?" Would you have them get another car on short notice just because a coincidental number plate *might* offend someone?

If you need proof that the Argentinians inciting that riot were completely baseless, they also picked apart May's and Hammond's plates too for having numbers that were "close

Clarkson said that it was pointed out to them early on. I'm sure it was far quicker to get a fake funny plate (or just have them on hand for shenanigans as Top Gear often does) than it would have been to re-register the car with a different plate. Especially considering IT WAS A COINCIDENCE AND PEOPLE ARE GETTING

Yeah, I haven't looked it up but you're probably right. It just seems like the way I laid it out seems to be how most journalists use the terms. But it could also vary if a company has both a "halo" car and a "flagship" car (assuming the as-used definitions are slightly different), as opposed to having either a halo

I think you're confusing flagship with halo. Flagship would be the Audi A8. Halo would be the R8.

When I bought my '96 Grand Prix about 8 years ago, it still had a dealer sticker on the trunk lid. While I'm definitely against them, not only did the sticker not technically harm the paint, it actually *protected* it against the minor fade the rest of the car had received.

There was only one generation of Pontiac Fiero with two variants: notchback and the fastback GT.

As someone who has been to Ghana, a neighbor to this country, I would say it's not entirely improbable. Chocolate is sold in grocery stores, but most Ghanaians don't shop at them, and I don't recall seeing chocolate sold elsewhere. Not to say it wasn't, but I don't remember seeing it.

The Ghanaian palette isn't one

The graph doesn't show that. It shows a deviation from the average. As another commenter said, 85% of drivers go a speed that is correct for the road rather than what the posted speed limit is. If that speed is higher than the limit (and I can even think of some where the average speed would be lower, but that's a

Oh okay, so you're just trolling, and not willing to elaborate. Sorry I fell for it.

You are the epitome of why people despise Internet commenters.

wat

I usually go to a quickie place because disposing of used oil is a hassle, as well as doing an oil change in the winter. But the place I go to allows you to just drive your car straight into their bay and they do the oil change without you ever getting out. I can see them add oil, and even see if they grab synthetic

The badge is too big for the nose.