signorgiuseppe
Signor Giuseppe
signorgiuseppe

Just rewatched Rise of the Guardiäns a film La SIgnora and I loved when we saw it in 3D upon its release. Il Signorino seemed to like it as well. Really too bad about the lack of sequel, but just because I wanted more. I’ve read some of the books it came from, and would happily read more.

Re: The Batman: Once their interpretation starts to grow a little old, they start adding in some other herœs and it gets interesting again. Really, the only bad thing about it is that it’s sort of a cross between the DCAU that came (mostly) before and Brave and the Bold that came after, with those two both beïng

And, as everyöne knows, when a comic character dies, that’s it, they’re never heard from again.

Ça peut être deux choses!

I’ve never bothered to look this up, but…
Un caillou is a pebble, which is a small stone. The French would for a stone is une pierre. Is “Caillou” his nickname because his name is Pierre, and either he is small or perhaps his father’s name is also Pierre?

This is the problem with “technically”: Blackboard Warrior can say “technically” because people in the field (i.e. my buddy who drives the Mars Rover) call it ['jɚənəs] and then you can say “technically” it’s because… well I’m not sure what your criteriä are, but that’s sort of the thing about “technically.”

I have a story I could tell that could turn and make this more about me, for let’s skip it. If contact helps, I’m reaching thru the ether(net cable) and giving you a hug. If not, whatever would help.

I’m goïng to defend it, respectfully. Somebody losing a battle just means s/he was up against a fœ s/he couldn’t beat. History is full of good people losing battles against evil, unfortunately. It dœsn’t mean they’re not courageous or prepared, it just means they were outmatched. As we all are against cancer… for now.

I’ve recently moved to Salem, and am tryïng to reconcile my discomfort with the popularization of Neöpaganism here. Like, if Auschwitz were a thriving commercial center for trendy Kaballah practitioners in 2350, and their police cars had offensive Jewish stereötypes on their doors.

As a recently relocated resident of Salem, it is actually pretty well known these days as a foodie destination.

Note: we do this during Who’s Afraid of Virginia Wolf and Cinderella too.

That’s now my second favorite put involving the lexeme “rhotic,” after that one about chirckern, i.e. rhoticity chicken.

It features all the classic Halloween characters, tho. If “Jingle Bells” was about Santa riding a sleigh pulled by eight reindeer, instead of a family riding a sleigh pulled by one horse, it’d be a Christmas song!

They definitely are Christmas songs, tho! You can’t play them in Februäry, even if you’ve just gotten back from a sleigh ride.

Oh, I get it. At first I was picturing more of a “How’s the world treating you, Mr. Solo?” “Like someöne who looks like a Wampa smells, Woody, set me up with a Correlliän Ale!”

I hate it when you someöne eat sand.

Mine is the The Real Ghostbusters Christmas episode, where they get zapped back in time, bust the ghosts of Jacob Marley et al., go back home, discover that Christmas has been Scroogized in the present, so they have to go back and impersonate the ghosts to teach Scrooge his lesson using technology instead of magic.

Counterpoint: While they certainly are associäted with Christmas, winter songs like “Let it Snow,” “Jingle Bells,” and “Winter Wonderland” are not Christmas songs anyway.

The French version of Neither… Nor… would actually be Ni… Ni…, which would just be Monty Python on the Holy Grail.

I love you…