Yeah, that's the word I was looking for. AC. Also, DC.
@Vitaly Usually once you've figured out how a mission works, you'll also easily beat several subsequent missions. Until you hit the next real challenge and have to adapt again.
I think it's more like days. Yesterday I managed to check into chat twice, and both times it was some small group of people going on about cards and medals and I dunno what.
Broken Flowers is a 2005 French/American comedy-drama film written and directed by Jim Jarmusch and produced by Jon Kilik and Stacey Smith. The film focuses on an aging "Don Juan" who embarks on a cross-country journey to track down four of his former lovers after receiving an anonymous letter stating that he has a son. The film stars Bill Murray, Jeffrey Wright, Sharon Stone, Frances Conroy, Jessica Lange, Tilda Swinton, Julie Delpy, Chloë Sevigny, and Mark Webber.
Plot
Don Johnston (Bill Murray), a former Don Juan having made a small fortune in the computer industry, wants to live in qu...
@Kit A dress is not a promise. Look it up in a dictionary of your choice. I'll wait.
@Martha I didn't name it. I guess it is a little disturbing, now that you mention it. The artist is a funny little elf, so "scary" never entered my thoughts when working with him.
@RegDwight A wedding dress implies a certain kind of promise. Are you being thick?
@Kit If by "thick" you mean "a multi-platinum American R&B Grammy Award-winning singer-songwriter, musician, composer, and actor, except without the E", then yes!
Well, Alan Thicke didn't know he terrified my son. He just happened to say "Hello, everybody!" on TV at the exact moment my son turned the volume to maximum.
Brings tears of laughter to my eyes every time I think about it.
His eyes got huge, he plopped down on the floor, and started crying and shaking uncontrollably.
Damn that Alan Thicke! giggle
Pardon me while I pout. I just got downvoted for "predilection." I really like that word too.
I'm not a native English speaker. I want to find the English equivalent of ho un debole per le ragazze svedesi that, in Italian, basically means "I particularly like Swedish girls." (It's just a random example; it might apply to many other things.) The point is that you want to emphasize the fact...
If German "W" is pronounced like an English "V"
and German "V" is pronounced like an English "F"
i.e. W → V V → F
Why is it that I continually hear German speakers pronounce their (English) V's as (English) W's when speaking English? 'Wirtual Reality', 'Wideo' for instance.
It doesn't...
@Reg: What's reputation? The Wiki says something about being able to purchase cards through friendly reputation (or higher), I got there via the Tyrant section of the Wiki, is that actually part of Tyrant?
I had a ton of fortresses and city stuff, from before there were Star Wars or Indiana Jones LEGO sets or any of that sellout crap (though... Star Wars models are cool). But I bought them all as a child so I never saved up for much of the big stuff.
@aedia Yeah, I'm looking at some Sponge Bob and Cars 2 sets right now... I have pretty much every Toy Story set, but not much Indiana Jones or Star Wars.
And the Harry Potter series is insanely expensive.
@Vitaly I suppose so. I'm not 100% sure which sets which cards can be encountered in (barely anyone is). I only know that I never had a shortage of Vampires.
If you watch closely, you'll note that I am never mean the first X times over. But if you don't actually learn anything from those X times, then I am very sorry, I am not an answering machine.
The floor boss would know, for instance, where the toilet paper was or where the extension cords were stored, in case there were questions.
The next half hour was spent discussing where the toilet paper was kept. Likely in the hallway storage closet, but Billy would check for sure the next time we were there.
In other words, they totally missed the point.
And no, it wasn't in Foucault's room. We call those "romps" not "festivals."