Antiquis temporibus, nati tibi similes in rupibus ventosissimis exponebantur ad necem. Amicule, deliciae, num is sum qui mentiar tibi?Quote:
Originally Posted by Deniz
PS: Homines libenter quod volunt credunt.
PPS: Hunc tu caveto!
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Antiquis temporibus, nati tibi similes in rupibus ventosissimis exponebantur ad necem. Amicule, deliciae, num is sum qui mentiar tibi?Quote:
Originally Posted by Deniz
PS: Homines libenter quod volunt credunt.
PPS: Hunc tu caveto!
pallida mors aequo pulsat pede pauperum tabernas regumque turres
sit tibi terra levis
exoriare aliquis nostris ex ossibus ultor
/pax vobiscum!
P.S. branza, ranza, manz, pranz,
gazda, brazda, **zda. :)
PPS.
Vivat nostra patria
Socialista, libera! :D
Torna, torna, frate!
Speak? NoQuote:
Originally Posted by Deniz
I can read it if I have a dictionary nearby. It is a struggle. My command of German and
French is similarly weak. I had a whole (sarcastic) two terms of Latin in college and it fades with
time. I wanted to be able to read the original sources of Roman history in the original language.
20 years ago I used to read everything I could get my hands on about ancient Rome and ancient
mesopotamia. My first degree was a BA in history. Went through undergrad a second time in engineering. Haven't read a lot of history recently. I must be getting old, sigh. (Growing up? Not a chance!)
In Romania Latin is taught (notice I said taught, not learnt) in the first two years in high school. In teory all of us should be able to speak it. In practice we terribly fail. ;) :sick:
Ultimul e un cuvant la care nu m-am gandit ca e de origine dacica.Quote:
P.S. branza, ranza, manz, pranz,
gazda, brazda, **zda.
English version:
Some Dacian words still endure... ;)
Exception: in computer science high schools the latin is not learnt.Quote:
Originally Posted by cilu
That's logical, as long as the former Roman legionnaires found here pretty Dacian girls and got married. :DQuote:
Originally Posted by cilu
/although to be correct: **zda sounds Dacian, but it seems more to be derived from old slavonic language.
(or maybe the slavs borrowed it from us... Who can exactly know? :))
:D... Of course...Quote:
Originally Posted by Tom Frohman
No, no! Everybody can kill him with a silver bullet.Quote:
Originally Posted by Tom Frohman
Forcing him to listen to 2 hours of Yanni would only disable him.Quote:
Originally Posted by ovidiucucu
Hey greate! I have forgot Latin since my medical college :D . LAst thing i know is :Quote:
Originally Posted by cilu
:D :D :D :DHTML Code:Rp: Spiritus Vini
And ancient roman words
[COLOR=DarkRed] No vagina no rubra cogorta[/COLOR]
MacGuiver can died of two things: slain in combat or of sorrow...Quote:
Originally Posted by Tom Frohman
Did you guys notice that MacGyver always gets the women? He's kinda similar to James Bond in that sense. And ofcourse, women do try to get them killed too..
Interestingly, Teri Hatcher who guest starred in two or more episodes in MacGyver also became a Bond Girl (Paris Carter, "Tomorrow Never Dies").
- MacGyver's old HS girlfriend frames him for her husband's death, when that didnt work... surprise, surprise.. she'll just kill him. :D
- Of the countless women that tried to kill James Bond... I liked Elektra King (played by Sophie Marceau) in "The World is Not Enough." Although ofcourse, her main target was Bond's boss, M. But i liked her character because it showed vulnerability and strength. ;)
/Why is Sophie Marceau not in the Sexiest Actress list??
Cool. :cool:Quote:
Originally Posted by cilu
Cannot be disabled. Just his first child made read-only.Quote:
Originally Posted by Tom Frohman
/is dog food toxic?
/Why is Sophie Marceau not in the Sexiest Actress list??
did not have to mention in the list, she is by default