shuvool
shuvool
shuvool

State laws can be more restrictive than federal laws as long as they don't countermand them. All 50 states require a license to operate a motor vehicle on public roadways. You can drive a tractor or pickup truck on a farm with no issue, but once you get onto a state highway, interstate, county road, or local public

I can't stand straight out of the jar sauce. I have to toss in sauteed onion, a handful of sliced mushrooms, and anything else I feel like at the time in order to make the sauce palatable

I wish there were something I could do to lower my auto insurance rates. My last accident (and the only one I've got on my drivers license record at all) was a single vehicle accident almost 9 years ago. My last moving violation was for a headlight being out 2 years ago, the one before that was speeding almost 7 years

If I knew, I could probably figure out a non violent solution ahead of time ;)

sounds like something you'd google if you're looking for guys

I tried re-playing Daggerfall about a year ago. Bethesda actually has it for free download on their site if you want it and don't still have the disc. It had a memorable storyline and at the time was revolutionary in how open the game was but going through the game talking to npc's that you had to ask 3 or 4 times

crispy bacon works as a decent edible spoon for scrambled eggs if I'm not feeling like tortillas or toast.

I never said you were wrong and I was right, I said that your perspective is affected by the passage of time, and then on top of it pointed out the most glaring problem of all of the ones on your list (that is was completely unplayable).

Well, there's this fat plumber named Mario that is pretty central to a couple of games out there. Just sayin'

Rose colored glasses. Daggerfall wasn't even playable wtihout downloading a patch. In 1996, when you got your games by walking/driving to the store and probably couldn't tie up your phone line for long enough to download a big patch like that. Those were all good games to be sure, but today's games are overall better.

World of Tanks for me. Free to play, paying gets you to where you would get anyways faster, but you can't buy anything with real money that's any more powerful than what you can get without spending real money. Even their "premium tanks" all have glaring weaknesses to make up for any advantages they have, although

That's not exactly apples and oranges there. Australia has fewer people than the state of California, aside from the different paradigm that the two countries have.

Bowing is one of the traditions that Koreans seem loath to relinquish. That's not necessarily a bad thing, as the Korean culture (and I would assume the Japanese culture) is based around subordinate/superior relationships. The way you end sentences, the (I don't remember the name for the term) word part that you tag

It varies, basically as a situation warrants it once the kid has the motor skills. I learned about bowing the first time I visited my mother's parents when I was about 6, although before that I played TKD and we bowed at the beginning and end of that

Must be nice. I left my last (and only) apartment after my lease was up, they refused to do anything about the bugs , the dumpster was spitting distance from the building I lived in, and they had a scheduled trash pickup one day a week, which required everyone to put their trash out in front of their door for a day.

I was stationed in SE GA (about a mile north of the FL border, doesn't get much deeper south that that I think) and one of the first things I noticed was there are a LOT of bugs. The paint on my car suffered from the lovebugs (not sure what they're really called, but they fly and you almost always see them mating)

So, basically you guys decided to use a term already popularly used for something else to refer to something popular for you guys. Meh, I can understand that. It's not like we don't do a lot of that down here with various terms and colloquialisms. I think I'll buy myself a toque if it gets much colder here. It was

I've heard those referred to as skullcap, beanie, watchcap, and knit cap, but the only time I've ever heard toque used is for those tall white hats that chefs are seen wearing on tv and in culinary brochures or luxury travel ads

What does a chef's had have todo with being canadian? o_O

I'm probably showing my age here, but how does one "got swag like a mofo"? swag is an acronym for "shit we all get" right? As in the stuff you get as promo material and that kind of thing