Only one you need to know is TxTireMan
#1
Only one you need to know is TxTireMan
#1
I've been told I can be inappropriate.....
Guilty of refund fraud
Have sold aCcounts for USD (and gree helped by manually transferring them lmao)
Chronic namer & shamer
Insults mods and staff regularly
Evades ban regularly
Bans YTD: 5 and counting
That and the magical deleting of threads. My suggestion, ask for a show of hands as to who have applied officially, or been nominated, and then after a day or ? Just toss the first question out there to all.
Just saying.
If I get my Trump impersonation down any better I'll be terrifically impossible to beat, but being really fair is great and I will be a great moderator...
Sorry, can't control it-
"When the going gets weird
The Weird turn pro."
-- Hunter S Thompson, True American
I can get you guys a list at the start of next week of folks if that helps at all but then again I'd like to respect folks privacy if they want to keep things separate as well.
Last edited by Sirius; 08-20-2015 at 03:40 PM. Reason: Because I can.
By your use of the term 'folks', it implies that you want an American to win it. I think that's terribly nationalistic (I could use stronger words but dare not). Are not the noble English included in this contest? What about Europeans or other nationalities? And the French are not included at all. For shame sir, for shame!
You just used "shag" and "biscuit". We knew what you meant.
Speaking of that, other then driving on the wrong side of the road, why is it you call it "maths" instead of math. You don't call English "Englishes". And why do you take some one to "hospital" rather than "the hospital". Is a hospital not a thing but a state of mind? Don't get me started on adding vowels to aluminum.
"The Tokyo Rose of the Trailer Park"
The maths/math thing is lost in the mists of time, but this might shed a bit of light - http://www.slate.com/blogs/lexicon_v...tive_noun.html
As for the hospital thing, it would be easy to quip that in most British cities there are more than one hospital, but probably more accurate that somewhere along the line Brits just stopped using the definite article when referring to things in everyday speech unlike in say, French where nouns are "le" or "la". Americans tend to use a lot of terms Brits would regard as archaic or extinct, such as gotten (and maybe that infuriating superfluous "of", such as in 'big of a deal').
Last edited by sister morphine; 08-20-2015 at 11:20 PM.
"The Tokyo Rose of the Trailer Park"