Tantrums
Pooster says: "When we were younger my little brother had a tantrum which ended when he threw a fork and it stuck in my other brother's cheek for a bit." Tell us your tales of screaming kids, and adults acting like children.
( , Thu 19 Jul 2012, 12:48)
Pooster says: "When we were younger my little brother had a tantrum which ended when he threw a fork and it stuck in my other brother's cheek for a bit." Tell us your tales of screaming kids, and adults acting like children.
( , Thu 19 Jul 2012, 12:48)
« Go Back
Hmmm
If 'to act like a cunt' is your goal
Then why not try being a troll?
Just stick things up your bum
Go and live with your mum
and spend all of your life on the dole
( , Tue 24 Jul 2012, 14:57, 11 replies)
If 'to act like a cunt' is your goal
Then why not try being a troll?
Just stick things up your bum
Go and live with your mum
and spend all of your life on the dole
( , Tue 24 Jul 2012, 14:57, 11 replies)
Also rhyming "goal" and "troll".
For that alone I think Ploppy should be mercilessly bullied.
( , Tue 24 Jul 2012, 15:44, closed)
For that alone I think Ploppy should be mercilessly bullied.
( , Tue 24 Jul 2012, 15:44, closed)
i dont hear anything wrong with that
Troll is pronounced "troal" after all.
( , Tue 24 Jul 2012, 16:47, closed)
Troll is pronounced "troal" after all.
( , Tue 24 Jul 2012, 16:47, closed)
Troll and droll come from the same root.
/uninteresting etymology of the day
( , Tue 24 Jul 2012, 18:42, closed)
/uninteresting etymology of the day
( , Tue 24 Jul 2012, 18:42, closed)
I have to say that surprises me.
I can't be arsed to look it up but I'd always assumed droll to have come from Old French (drĂ´le- at last, a use for my Canadian keyboard setup) and Troll to be of a Scandewegian origin.
( , Tue 24 Jul 2012, 19:00, closed)
I can't be arsed to look it up but I'd always assumed droll to have come from Old French (drĂ´le- at last, a use for my Canadian keyboard setup) and Troll to be of a Scandewegian origin.
( , Tue 24 Jul 2012, 19:00, closed)
Yup. Droll from drôle from drolle from droll meaning a mischievous buffoon or sprite.
( , Tue 24 Jul 2012, 19:02, closed)
( , Tue 24 Jul 2012, 19:02, closed)
I fancy some bullying, so;
There once was a limerick by me,
That didn't rhyme at all,
It didn't have those two middle lines which are shorter than the rest,
That limerick by me.
*click* ;)
( , Tue 24 Jul 2012, 17:53, closed)
There once was a limerick by me,
That didn't rhyme at all,
It didn't have those two middle lines which are shorter than the rest,
That limerick by me.
*click* ;)
( , Tue 24 Jul 2012, 17:53, closed)
« Go Back