So some actions don't seem to count as "becoming active".
Unless I misunderstand yet again.
I'm on 4x, after all.
Huh, one of the Last Stand guys actually has an empty deck. Too bad you don't get to fight against those ones more often, for the reasons we discussed above.
That daily chance thing can't possibly be server-side. Or can it? I mean, if it's user-side, there should be a way to see the stuff in advance before choosing a slot.
Unless the flash app generates the contents of the slots post factum.
If you haven't tried your chance yet, get a log of your packets, just in case (and if you know enough about network monitoring or can figure it out fast)
But then such a popular game is bound to have protection like unique IDs generated for each daily chance packet, or something better
@MrHen, @MrDisappointment: Don't forget to surrender if you're about to lose, or close tab refresh if it is too late for surrender: in case you didn't know, the enemy gets only 10 points if you surrender or quit in time.
The Alans or Alani (occasionally termed Alauni or Halani) were a group of Sarmatian tribes, nomadic pastoralists of the 1st millennium AD who spoke an Eastern Iranian language which derived from Scytho-Sarmatian and which in turn evolved into modern Ossetian.
Name
The various forms of Alan — Greek: Αλανοί, Αλαννοί; Chinese: 阿蘭聊 Alanliao (Pinyin) in the 2nd century, 阿蘭 Alan (Pinyin) in the 3rd century — and Iron (a self-designation of the Alans' modern Ossetian descendants, indicating early tribal self-designation) are Iranian dialectical forms of Aryan. These and other variants of Aryan...
Great travellers already ;-)
Well not that Germanic actually.
You know I thought about the "ni" again yesterday.
and I have a few examples for you - and a lo and behold even a rule!
Okay, so the English got their pronunciation from French through those scribes; and you are speculating about a similar influence having affected Dutch?
At any rate, I still don't completely understand all your parellels, and I have never heard of tong's being pronounced with /ʌ/ in Middle Dutch, though it could be right. But the development from spelling u to o happens in various Lower-German regions/dialects, not just those bordering on France.
You have Philippe le Bel (burned the templars - bel means actually tall), Jean le bon (bon means brave on the battle field - albeit hardly successful), Philippe le Bon (Burgundy), Philippe le Beau (Habsburg - this time handsome). Confusing ????
Jean II de France, dit Jean le Bon, (né le au château du Gué de Maulny du Mans - mort à Londres le ), fils du roi Philippe VI et de son épouse Jeanne de Bourgogne, fut roi de France de 1350 à 1364, second souverain issu de la maison capétienne de Valois.
Il est sacré roi de France le 26 septembre 1350.
Le règne de Jean II le Bon est marqué par la défiance du pays envers les Valois choisis à la mort de Charles IV pour éviter qu'Édouard III, le plus proche descendant de Philippe le Bel ne prenne possession du trône de France. La nouvelle dynastie, confrontée à la crise de la féodalité, ...
John II (16 April 1319 – 8 April 1364), called John the Good (), was the King of France from 1350 until his death. He was the second sovereign of the House of Valois and is perhaps best remembered as the king who was vanquished at the Battle of Poitiers and taken as a captive to England.
The son of Philip VI and Joan the Lame, John became the Count of Anjou, Count of Maine, and Duke of Normandy in 1332. He was created Count of Poitiers in 1344, Duke of Aquitaine in 1345, and Duke of Burgundy (as John I) from 1361 to 1363. By his marriage to Joanna I, Countess of Auvergne and Boulogne, he...
@RegDwight Because you're all talking away regarding (and probably playing) the game; meanwhile I'm tasked with having to create a reusable control to adhere to this new EU cookie legislation. Draaaaaag.