My Wife says she wants nothing for Mothers Day
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- Mr.DeadLegs
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My Wife says she wants nothing for Mothers Day
do I believe her? LOL Suggestions?
"Life's journey is not to arrive at the grave safely in a well preserved body, but rather to slide in sideways totally worn out, shouting "Holy large steaming pile of dog doo what a Ride" " Nolan Whitesell
- sbroam
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Nothing says "I love you" like a new composite boat - perhaps a Rival.
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Good luck
I still get grief for the time my wife got a canoe for a gift. . . but I did paddle that boat for 15 years!!!
A popular recent birthday gift was the "Half the Stick - Twice the Chick" long-sleeve shirt. Good luck,
Jim
A popular recent birthday gift was the "Half the Stick - Twice the Chick" long-sleeve shirt. Good luck,
Jim
Jim
mothers day
Dude dont buy into her answer . Relationship suicde. Try the fully inflated airbag. Always scores big for me. JIM
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mothers day
sounds like horrifically bad fate is in store
-she wants you to know what she wants without having to tell you so she knows that you care about her and have been paying attention-
-she wants you to know what she wants without having to tell you so she knows that you care about her and have been paying attention-
"A Canadian is someone who knows how to make love in a canoe." --Pierre Burton
I know y'ins are mostly from south of the border, but hey, the US is just Canada's 10th province, or 4th territory, or 3rd distinct society, whatever. Either way, we paddlers regardless of country of origin could probably (at least vicariously) relate to this quote. So canoes IMO are fair game.
I know y'ins are mostly from south of the border, but hey, the US is just Canada's 10th province, or 4th territory, or 3rd distinct society, whatever. Either way, we paddlers regardless of country of origin could probably (at least vicariously) relate to this quote. So canoes IMO are fair game.
-- Cya
From wikipedia and pretty much right on.... Note the appropriate spelling. Often hear during sporting events from chicks with big hair and guys with mullets - always slopping down "irons" (as in Iron City Beer)!
Paul C. (A Burgh'er)you familiar plural is a second-person plural pronoun used mainly in southwest Pennsylvania, including Pittsburgh, but it is also found throughout the Appalachians. (See: Pittsburgh English.)
you familiar plural is the most recent derivation from the original Scots-Irish form you ones, which is probably the result of a contact situation between Irish and English. When standard-English speakers talk in the first person or third person, they use different pronouns to distinguish between singular and plural. In the first person, for example, speakers use the singular I and the plural we. But when speaking in the second person, you performs double duty as both the singular form and the plural form. Crozier (1984) suggests that during the 19th century, when many Irish speakers switched to speaking English, they filled this gap with you ones, primarily because Irish has a singular second-person pronoun, tu, as well as a plural form, sibh. The following therefore is the most likely path from you ones to you familiar plural: you ones [yu w'nz] > you'uns [yu'nz] > youns [yunz] > yunz [y'nz] > you familiar plural [y'nz]. Because there are still speakers who use each form, there is no stable second-person plural pronoun form in southwest or central Pennsylvania—which is why this pronoun is variably referred to or spelled as you'uns, yunz, you familiar plural, yins or ynz.
Obviously, in other parts of the U.S., Irish or Scots-Irish speakers encountered the same gap in the second-person plural. For this reason, these speakers are also responsible for coining the yous found mainly in New Jersey and the ubiquitous y'all of the South.
you familiar plural's place as one of Pittsburgh's most famous regionalisms makes it both a badge of pride and a way to show self-deprecation. For example, a group of Pittsburgh area political cheerleaders call themselves "you familiar plural Cheer," and an area literary magazine is The New Yinzer, a take-off of The New Yorker. Those perceived to be stereotypical blue collar Pittsburghers are often referred to as Yinzers, a name many native Pittsburghers consider to be a mild pejorative, like calling someone a hick, or a rube.
Paul C.
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- sbroam
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Hope you have a comfortable couch...CFriik wrote:you are lucky your wife doesn't want anything for mother's day. mine wants a new zephyr or zoom. but i already bought her a coleman ram-x 15.5' from canadian tire.
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