"Jelly" is an Americanism - Tolkien would have used "jam".
"Jelly" is an Americanism - Tolkien would have used "jam".
The difference is that MMOs have boring gameplay whereas Destiny is a viscerally satisfying FPS.
It is, and God knows where "apricot jelly" came from - particularly egregious as Tolkien would never have used the obnoxious Americanism "jelly" instead of "jam". The quote is butter.
Is it? To me it seems like an accurate paraphrase of what the two creators said.
Fantastic. I especially like how the ship's so slow to become cognizant of its own catastrophic failure.
Sorry mate, you're just a bit dull. I started picking up on the emotional connection and outright flirting at the start of this season. And I was slow. Looks like many others started to think something was going on a whole season before that. The idea that this came out of nowhere is a bunkum criticism, because it's…
Exactly my feelings... I don't really care about any "social ramifications". This made me really happy simply because it felt so right. I started noticing the rather obvious romantic interactions between the two in this final season, and realised how perfectly the two complemented each other. Removed of any LGBT…
Dude, give it up. You were wrong. It's over.
Nice gif, although to be precise, it turned out that only one of the ships had cannon. Now the ship's victorious, and obviously its foes have been blown to smithereens.
This is normally the part where you say where she said it.
She wasn't guillotined for being a woman, she was guillotined for living in decadence whilst the population starved to death. Not really that unfortunate.
That's on a subjective, metaphorical level. What I said was they didn't actually exist in-univer as prejudices within the magical community. Obviously werewolves are not the same thing as homosexuals.
Every other major character isn't Dumbledore. He's the enigmatic lynchpin to the whole series. As such, it was much more effective left tacit. He was also silent about the brawl which left his sister dead.
I think you're exactly right... in terms of the situation in-universe, there was an interesting kind of egalitarianism; things like racism (towards humans, anyway) simply didn't seem to exist as issues in the wizarding world. Possibly there was some kind of historical reason for that, or possibly it was just rendered…
Idiot.
"disgrace"
In purely aesthetic terms, it's pretty bad.
What the flip is happening with the elevator shaft in this animation?
Would those laws apply to relationships and marriages? Because that would cause colossal problems.
Wow. As a journalist, you might want to brush up on your legal lingo as a matter of urgent priority.