twaddler
twaddler
twaddler

YES IT'S HAPPENING I'LL BUY FIVE CAMERAS AND A LOOM

MAKE THIS REAL NOW.

Bob Dylan was a pop star.

"WELCOME TO NEW YORK

I dunno, as a native, it feels kind of weird hearing the bubble-gum phrase "WELCOME TO NEW YORK" repeated over and over by a charmed blond transplant when so many people who've lived her for decades are being shown the door.

"Sure, bomb threats are terrible. BUT SHE WAS SMUG ON TWITTER MAYBE! DOESN'T THAT BOTHER YOU?"

No, it doesn't.

As someone who was in New York at the time and personally knows people who lost loved ones, it makes me physically ill to read that crap.

That game was over! SF shouldn't even be running a play on 2nd down with :23 on the play clock and :22 left in the game!

That game was over! SF shouldn't even be running a play on 2nd down with :23 on the play clock and :22 left in the game!

Huh? I've been using these for at least a year and have been shocked other companies hadn't caught on! Am I in a test market? (Probably.)

They charge hourly for Gogo, don't they? Now you'll have to pay per hour for in-flight entertainment instead of getting anything for free.

The Old Testament was primarily written in Hebrew. Some passages are written in Aramaic. Jesus probably spoke Aramaic and Greek but most scholars think the New Testament was written in Greek. The Talmud is in Aramaic. Maybe you're thinking of that?

No you just have to take a bath for that.

Oops! You could be referring to the Syriac Peshitta. But I'm still pretty sure the Septuagint, the use of which was much more widespread, came from the Hebrew. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peshitta#…

I'm not sure what text you're referring to. As far as I'm aware, the Septuagint, which was translated into Greek pretty early in the development of Christianity, was based on a Hebrew text. http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topi…

I can't think of any extant Aramaic versions of the Bible. The Dead Sea Scrolls, which

I'm not sure what you mean by "translation." I can read both Hebrew and Aramaic.

I thought Leviticus was in Hebrew.