If you don't like LOL, how do you abbreviate "Lots of Love"?
If you don't like LOL, how do you abbreviate "Lots of Love"?
Not at my library yet!
I was just making a joke, because in ASOIAF, people make fun of nipples on a breastplate, a lot. I get that people take the historical accuracy of nipples very seriously, but as you pointed out, this is fantasy.
How does it differ because it's leather, though? (not snarky, I just don't know enough about history of armor)
Now I'm curious! Leather armor is lined, isn't it?
That makes it look very useful! Seriously though, it's a quote from the books and I think it's said in the show. In addition, the show's history is not Earth's history.
It was a joke, but were they useful in history? Westeros has a fictional history, so those nipples might not have historical commonality, there.
That armor seems as useful as nipples on a breastplate.
So a Bipedal tetrapod?
I can't use the words to curse you enough right now!
At a certain point, when it gets old enough, it has the ability to travel through time non-linearly, which makes no sense if it has be a certain age in order to acquire the power.
Shouldn't we find a comparison to the tetrapod with the next strongest bite? Tyrannosaurus is a biped and that's just apples and oranges!
I think that bar tending is substantially less structured (and more likely to be structured hourly) than the other professions shown, here. Tips, as everyone has pointed out, also skew the data, because how bartenders are paid is not solely determined by the employer. Clearly, the article tried to compensate for…
Agreed, however, having 35 hours as a minimum gives us an agreement that people are in the range of full-time and are doing this as a career.
The findings compare the median weekly earnings of men and women who work at least 35 hours a week year-round.
I like your movie!
I really enjoyed this discussion! I still enjoy the isolation of the characters, but also look forward to a different take!
We lost some of the mystery. There could be great plot lines where people realistically believe that the cause of the outbreak is religious or alien in nature. They might be disproved, they might have great red herrings! No one is in the position to ask where a virus came from, but if they believed that it was some…
I think that it's partly because "the virus" is kind of a stupid mistake. The whole group should never have gone to the CDC and found out what was causing the zombie epidemic. The cause is not important, because there isn't a solution. Better that they should have been kept in the dark.
Still, you run into some really bad ones. Overall, it's the best way to control line weight, though.