Tani Ryoko is disgusting. She pretends to be nice, but if you carefully listen to her, she's always showing off her achievements. Her hunger for fame will never be fed.
When you cut the cheese, why don't you put a bottle or something on your asshole, make it, and you can smell the accumulated fart to your heart's content.
Kimmy Mizener is the second to the throne of the princess of American figure skating, I understand. But she's unfortunate. She lives in the same era as Mao does.
>>962 You must be kidding. LOL~~~ He's just a random poster. He didn't know what's going on her, and still wanted to make a comment. Don't call him a know-it-all brat! LOL~~
I started to think there were no native speakers in a message system like this. It's a pain to read Japanese for English speaking people, you know. The Japanese language must be a puzzle which needs great decoding skills. Thinking this way, it's meaningless to ask for help here. We'd better go see oversea sites.
Is Bush suppposed to win the election? But if he loses, what will happen? The president will get american soldiers in Iraq back to their daily life? America is faced with a difficult problem now. Their decision will have a great impact on how the world will be.
Bush was active for the past several days, wasn't he? He had North Korea back in the meeting. Sadam was sentenced to death. And he was moving back and forth, from coast to coast.
>>979 I've never played that game. There is a common phrase in English, "Wake up and smell the roses," which means "Come back to reality," and people like to play around with it, using other words in place of "Roses." One variation caught on and became very popular, and that is "Wake up and smell the coffee."
That's just to the best of my current knowledge. I haven't researched it or anything, so if you are really interested, you may want to.
>>980 This is the first time I've heard the phrase "Wake up and smell the roses," and the "coffee" version of it, and I liked them very much! I'll try to find the situation where I can use them. Thanx very much for introducing us the phrases!
>>942>>969 I mostly voted Democrat, but I also voted for some non-Democrats, too.
Bush isn't up for election; he's leaving in 2008, no matter what, thank goodness. What _is_ up for election today is a large number of House and Senate seats; those, in some ways, are more important than who's the president. The Congress proposes legislation; the President cannot initiate his own. Only because Bush has had the support of many Republicans has he been able to do many of the things he's done.
>>988 Interesting. I've heard of "as cold as ice" and "as cool as a cucumber" before, but never of this one. But why American people think a cucumber is cool is still a mystery to me, though.
That's a bunch of BS. Cucumbers are regarded not cool, but cooling down, or disperse, heat when applied that way. There is a world of difference between the two.