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-   -   Where we leave messages for people not on this board (http://www.zefrank.com/bulletin_new/showthread.php?t=11518)

MoJoRiSin 01-04-2010 03:27 PM

i don't see anything

http://www.kryptos-cia.com/images/monalisa2.jpg

brightpearl 01-05-2010 04:01 PM

I told her to have a chicken and ricotta roulade for lunch.
:mad:

Brynn 01-05-2010 04:36 PM

Why hello there - is your conscience bothering you?
Almost three and a half months have gone by. I haven't forgotten. If you were a bottle of water, I'd choose to write "Overwhelming love" on your label in order to see you transform. I'd also write "Complete Awareness" as well as "Blessing." However I'm going to throw in "Recipient of his own standard of judgment" as well for good measure, which I think is more than fair. Now go walk my dog, and take an extra bag for your own poop.

lukkucairi 01-07-2010 03:09 PM

look, dears, we are just not the same species. do we have to be unpleasant to each other? I'll be out of your hair soon enough.

MoJoRiSin 01-07-2010 10:21 PM

I understand ::
ie in his mind he is

MoJoRiSin 01-12-2010 06:30 PM

The Word of the Day for January 12, 2010 is:
suborn • \suh-BORN\ • verb
*1 : to induce secretly to do an unlawful thing
2 : to induce to commit perjury; also : to obtain (perjured testimony) from a witness
Example Sentence:
"In the first place, a jury could not easily be suborned by any one." (Theodore Dreiser, The Financier)
Did you know?
The Latin word that gave us "suborn" in the early part of the 16th century is "subornare," which translates literally as "to secretly furnish or equip." The "sub-" that brings the "secretly" meaning to "subornare" more commonly means "under" or "below," but it has its stealthy denotation in the etymologies of several other English words, including "surreptitious" (from "sub-" and "rapere," meaning "to seize") and the verb "suspect" (from "sub-" or "sus-" and "specere," meaning "to look at"). The "ornare" of "subornare" is also at work in the words "ornate," "adorn," and "ornament."

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.
What's this? Play today's podcast

Jack Flanders 01-13-2010 02:15 AM

earth to ummm ...

MoJoRiSin 01-16-2010 12:58 AM

did you mean some gut feeling like this?
It's the end of the world! Everyone! head for the hills! NOW!

that sort of organization?
You do not need to make any apologies
that feeling is
only human :)

MoJoRiSin 02-09-2010 02:47 AM


MoJoRiSin 02-11-2010 02:31 PM

bye george [indent]i think [/INDENT

you've got it!

MoJoRiSin 02-12-2010 09:51 AM

K (if by chance you ever read this)
Surely she wrote the "extra books"
that her son published after her dath
in her spare tine
ha ha
As Emilie Loring
[edit]Books (alphabetical by title)
1939 Across the Years (Little, Brown)
1937 As Long As I Live (Penn)
1947 Beckoning Trails (Little, Brown)
1958 Behind the Cloud (Little, Brown)
1945 Beyond the Sound of Guns (Little, Brown)
1946 Bright Skies (Little, Brown)
1964 A Candle in Her Heart (Little, Brown)
1925 A Certain Crossroad (Penn)
1931 Fair Tomorrow (Penn)
1963 Follow Your Heart (Little, Brown)
1952 For All Your Life (Little, Brown)
1965 Forever and a Day (Little, Brown)
1971 Forsaking All Others (Little, Brown)
1928 Gay Courage (Penn)
1936 Give Me One Summer (Penn)
1924 Here Comes the Sun! (Penn)
1938 High of Heart (Little, Brown)
1933 Hilltops Clear (Penn)
1960 How Can the Heart Forget? (Little, Brown)
1948 I Hear Adventure Calling (Little, Brown)
1954 I Take This Man (Little, Brown)
1968 In Times Like These (Little, Brown)
1935 It's a Great World! (Penn)
1944 Keepers of the Faith (Little, Brown)
1967 A Key to Many Doors (Little, Brown)
1930 Lighted Windows (Penn)
1957 Look to the Stars (Little, Brown)
1949 Love Came Laughing By (Little, Brown)
1969 Love with Honor (Little, Brown)
1954 My Dearest Love (Little, Brown)
1970 No Time for Love (Little, Brown)
1942 Rainbow at Dusk (Little, Brown)
1955 The Shadow of Suspicion (Little, Brown)
1972 The Shining Years (Little, Brown)
1927 The Solitary Horseman (Penn)
1966 Spring Always Comes (Little, Brown)
1941 Stars in Your Eyes (Little, Brown)
1929 Swift Water (Penn)
1940 There Is Always Love (Little, Brown)
1962 Throw Wide the Door (Little, Brown)
1950 To Love and to Honor (Little, Brown)
1938 Today Is Yours (Little, Brown)
1922 The Trail of Conflict (Penn)
1932 Uncharted Seas (Penn)
1934 We Ride the Gale (Penn)
1956 What Then Is Love (Little, Brown)
1943 When Hearts are Light Again (Little, Brown)
1941 Where Beauty Dwells (Little, Brown)
1934 With Banners (Penn)
1955 With This Ring (Little, Brown)

brightpearl 02-12-2010 12:51 PM

I was right with you until you followed the statement, "I never cheated on her," with the words "except for" and more than one noun phrase.

MoJoRiSin 02-12-2010 09:06 PM

this won's for you
 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vagabond_(film)

MoJoRiSin 02-13-2010 08:32 PM

alright already :( please stop putting lables on everybody!

MoJoRiSin 02-14-2010 10:15 AM



"Until the rocks
melt into the sun
my dear(s)
I will Love you still"


((just like the poems says except in this case
the u in Luve equals "the World"))

Happy Valentine's Day
Darlin(ses)
ox L,L


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