My dog says "Woof woof" to you, Jake. My dog says "Aroooooo!"
My dog says "Woof woof" to you, Jake. My dog says "Aroooooo!"
Where did you come from, where did you go?
Oddly enough, the show this reminded me, both in the animation and the rhythms, was "Harvey Birdman, Attorney at Law". I wasn't vary impressed by this, but I loved Harvey Birdman, so I think I'll give it a few more shots at least.
"Return to Suicide House Part Gore" to be precise.
Action figure (and split-second video game appearance). Mr. Everett is merely grossly inappropriate.
It was all worth it to see somebody, anybody, reference the kid with the rattail that came out his pant leg.
Yeah, I've seen Dr. Claw's face, and it's terrible…
I think you're underestimating how easy taking part in a simple chant really is.
Learn to English, dickweed. This is just poor form all around…
Why do I always end up feeding the trolls?
Call me when they put out the stamps of Kardue'sai'malloc (a.k.a. Labria), the Butcher of Montellian Serrat.
You're not even pretending to make sense anymore…
And here I thought your other comments were incoherent…
Yes, "Voldemor", or "Voldemore", or "Voldemoor". It doesn't matter how it's spelled!
Because she felt like it? Just because we don't pronounce the "t"s at the end of, for example, "crochet", "debut", or "depot" doesn't make them french words. They're english words (presumably with some french origins) which the english speaking population can pronounce however the hell we want.
A cursory glance at the show's TV Club page indicates that yes, both other previous clip shows were fully covered.
She never said it was a french name, only that she pronounced it with a silent "t", which is not the prevailing pronunciation even in official media (hence her saying that being a news story). Not all that much about how vowels in english are pronounced is constant across all accents. I can't and won't accept you…
The anagram is "Tom Malvolo Riddle" = "I am Lord Voldemort", so get off your high horse. Also, "poor" and "pore" are pronounced the same by a large quantity of native english speakers, and you are in no position to say that's wrong. (Mood and mode are different though, it's the "r" that brings the sounds together)
It's a non-preexisting name from a British book. It's an English name, no matter where the building blocks might have originated.
I understand your point. I don't understand why you're making such a fervent stand of it. Accusing people of not pronouncing things properly because they don't match how you think they should. If I thought you were defending a distinction in the accent of english you spoke, I'd let it go. But I'm not convinced you've…