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    juanr
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    juanr

    Uh, unless show-ers have a permanent erection, of course they also grow.

    I read the comments to this last night on HP, and I'd say over 90% were dismissive of her. But from both men AND women.

    Songs?

    Yes. Duncan would have tested negative right off the plane as well.

    I wish I had gone to a pubic high school...

    I'll add a bit more.

    First, she was a substitute teacher. You don't need a full credential for that, just a temporary document. Second, some credential programs are fast-track and take just a year (after college).

    But she wasn't just an ordinary reader, was she? I thought she was selected to receive an advance copy of the book and posted her review before the book even came out?

    Indeed. Author needs more exposure to penises, apparently.

    Ha! Yes, I originally wrote "me and Susie," but changed it to match something else I wrote below that. I've recently been living in a poor area of Indiana (my first red state), and I've heard "Susie and me" and lots of other strange things, but, yeah, "me and Susie" is more common. But here in Indiana I hear white…

    That's an interesting case.

    Uh, who was the one who corrected it?

    The English of the majority of US speakers no longer features "whom" in everyday speech. Probably the vast majority. So it has already been "removed" from everyday speech.

    Sounds typical of the trend in "interviews" in the US. More an attempt to showcase the writer's prose rather than an actual interview. In other countries, long, straight-forward Q&A are still perfectly acceptable.

    This is what she wants to find out:

    I guess you missed the io9 article about this over a week ago. It is not very contagious since it is no airborne, but it is highly infectious—just a bit of contact is enough to get infected.

    Don't people spend that type of money on sporting events and concerts?

    Yes, indeed. I believe now they are usually referred to via their language, Nahuatl. So, "Nahua peoples."

    It's the first link to LiveScience. It compares entire states. And, unless I'm missing something, not really that noteworthy.

    Until it becomes a big issue in a senate race, then people make it seem totally uncomplicated.