Re: Some Funny Pics.
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My first car was also a Beetle. Primer red top, faded blue body and black baja fenders. Ahh.. good times.
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reminds me one of first posts!
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This should go into that "fine design" topic maybe
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Boo, those are some pics that make you go, "Huh?!?"
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Did you model this in SU Marcus?
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@d12dozr said:
Boo, those are some pics that make you go, "Huh?!?"
Hmm, design fault, always wipe from front to back.
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Funny you should ask, Gai...in fact I did, on the request of one of my buddies! ...I never really finished it tho
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That is some thick ass paper, pardon the pun.
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@unknownuser said:
That is some thick ass paper, pardon the pun.
I made it thick enough to print on a 3D printer...I'm entering it in a contest so I'll show ya'll if I win
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Ah, good. Otherwise that would be a real scraper.
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Now you are just talking shit Gai.
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@unknownuser said:
That is some thick ass paper, pardon the pun.
something i heard a while ago… (and i can't remember exactly how it was worded but..)
when people use the saying '_______ ass ______'
switch ass to an adjective(?)..
"wow, she has long ass hair" = (her ass hair is long)… "that's some rotten ass juice!".. etc..
it's stuck with me ever since..
EDIT__ ha.. well basically, i'm just saying what you did there with your pun
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Jeff, I've spent some time trying to fully understand the ussage of as* by Americans. I've reached this conclusion:
-It can be a postposition more or less meaning "very", with the difference that "very" is a preposition. Example: "Big as*" = "Very big", "Cheap as*" = "Very cheap". Also, combinations of an adjective+as* can be used as a noun. Example: "Don't be a cheap as*"
-It can represent the person itself, similar to the ancient usage of "soul". Example: "Bring your as* over here right now", "I own your as*", "Hide my as*".
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What has happened here is that colloquial usage or auditory interpretation has taken hold. For instance: "big ass" should be big assed-- or equipped with excessive proportions of whatever the attribute is, for whatever the subject under discussion is.
So, Miguel, you are correct in your interpretation.
Similarly, the phrase "could of" would be properly "could have", or the contraction "could've".
Not meaning to be judgmental.
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