Haha very nice :P dan make sure you put a glue trap under it so when he does fall under it he stuck there while he has to listion to you and gachi sign
Are you guys familiar with the Bear Grylls meme "better drink my own piss"? Every time Meaton posts, I imagine a picture of him with an arbitrary bit of text such as "it is raining outside" at the top and a "better spam the forums" bit at the bottom.
The following message is paid for by DAN @ SPRINT SUCKS BALLS>> carry on .. but for real to help you out .. find out if sprint is good where you going to mainly use it.. find out from friends.. reason si where i live it sucks verizon is hands down in the area.. if i was u i would stay with verizon :)
Where I am at the issues with Verizon (drop calls and 3g) are bothering me. Heard issues with Sprint seems to make it equal, but Sprint is offering a glorious deal. Really trying to figure if Sprint deals r more talk then anything else.
I have T-mobile and don't want AT&T... I'm stuck choosing between Sprint (where unlimited is still unlimited) or Verizon (The Vader of Cell Phone Companies).
i used to have tmobile but i jumped back to verizon due all the issues i had with tmoblie with the calls droping all over the place snice i had verizon i had 1 drop call that is all :"
Lay - noun: 39. Ropemaking . the quality of a fiber rope characterized by the degree of twist, the angles formed by the strands, and the fibers in the strands
Its time for a double post, and more reference material! I've been having a conundrum recently. This post is the result. The issue at hand is: just what the hell is the difference between lie and lay? I remember someone telling me at some point during this thing called life, but for whatever reason it just didn't stick. So here it is!
Lay 1 and lie 2 are often confused. Lay is most commonly a transitive verb and takes an object. Its forms are regular. If “place” or “put” can be substituted in a sentence, a form of lay is called for: Lay the folders on the desk. The mason is laying brick. She laid the baby in the crib. Lay also has many intransitive senses, among them “to lay eggs” ( The hens have stopped laying ), and it forms many phrasal verbs, such as lay off “to dismiss (from employment)” or “to stop annoying or teasing” and lay over “to make a stop.” Lie, with the overall senses “to be in a horizontal position, recline” and “to rest, remain, be situated, etc.,” is intransitive and takes no object. Its forms are irregular; its past tense form is identical with the present tense or infinitive form of lay : Lie down, children. Abandoned cars were lying along the road. The dog lay in the shade and watched the kittens play. The folders have lain on the desk since yesterday.