Vocabulary and Slang
Moderator: Priests of Syrinx
- Big Blue Owl
- Posts: 7457
- Joined: Thu Aug 17, 2006 7:31 am
- Location: Somewhere between the darkness and the light
Trust me- if I had to do it over again- I would have said phuckit. My date (Mary- names changed to protect the not so innocent...lol) had sent me in to sit with one of her teammates from softball (Judy- who was 1000000x nicer than my date- not talking looks, just attitude) who was working the door (Mary was a junior, Judy was a sophomore) and I should have just called my dad to pick me up and I should have hung out with Judy after getting cleaned up.Big Blue Owl wrote:^^^
Oh lawd! I feel bad for ya, man. That must've suckled.
Mary only used me to go to her prom.
- Big Blue Owl
- Posts: 7457
- Joined: Thu Aug 17, 2006 7:31 am
- Location: Somewhere between the darkness and the light
LMAOYYZ30 wrote:(Stolen from Gabriel Iglesias)
'mere.
There are three kinds of drunks- happy drunks, mean drunks, and 'mere drunks...you know the third kind when they start to talk...
"'mere...I wanna talk to you"

I'm a happy drunk. Just prop me up and leave me a smoke.

Don't start none...won't be none.
Related to the "Heat" thread in General:
Humidex -- The humidex is a measurement used by Canadian meteorologists to reflect the combined effect of heat and humidity. It differs from the heat index used in the United States in using dew point rather than relative humidity. According to the Meteorological Service of Canada, a humidex of at least 40 causes "great discomfort" and above 45 is "dangerous." When the humidex hits 54, heat stroke is imminent.
The record humidex in Canada occurred on July 25, 2007, when Carman, Manitoba hit 53.0. This breaks the previous record of 52.1 set in 1953 in Windsor, Ontario, (The residents of Windsor would not have known this at the time, since the humidex had yet to be invented).
*Note: we have a By-torian or two in Windsor!*
Humidex -- The humidex is a measurement used by Canadian meteorologists to reflect the combined effect of heat and humidity. It differs from the heat index used in the United States in using dew point rather than relative humidity. According to the Meteorological Service of Canada, a humidex of at least 40 causes "great discomfort" and above 45 is "dangerous." When the humidex hits 54, heat stroke is imminent.
The record humidex in Canada occurred on July 25, 2007, when Carman, Manitoba hit 53.0. This breaks the previous record of 52.1 set in 1953 in Windsor, Ontario, (The residents of Windsor would not have known this at the time, since the humidex had yet to be invented).
*Note: we have a By-torian or two in Windsor!*
Onward and Upward!
- Big Blue Owl
- Posts: 7457
- Joined: Thu Aug 17, 2006 7:31 am
- Location: Somewhere between the darkness and the light
Absolute Zero
Absolute zero is the lowest possible temperature where nothing could be colder, and no heat energy remains in a substance. Absolute zero is the point at which molecules do not move (relative to the rest of the body) more than they are required to by a quantum mechanical effect called zero-point energy. It is a theoretical limit and cannot be achieved.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Absolute_zero
Absolute zero is the lowest possible temperature where nothing could be colder, and no heat energy remains in a substance. Absolute zero is the point at which molecules do not move (relative to the rest of the body) more than they are required to by a quantum mechanical effect called zero-point energy. It is a theoretical limit and cannot be achieved.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Absolute_zero
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