- Joined
- Jan 20, 2012
- Messages
- 21,192
lol factsYou know I’m tempted to ask who your top 5 are but I don’t want to start a war.
185 is 185. Dont be dumb.Haha he was also 5’10 and all muscle. Don’t be this dumb
Too many unfunny guys trying too hard to be funny and political dipshyt commentators. Gotta wade through the first hundred posts of a bunch of guys repeating the same played out gag, and the same couple of guys going off on never ending tête-à-tête snoozefest personal conversations about Mexico or weed or some other ponderous subject. Fcking dull.Happens almost every thread LCE. I wish they would create a special board by invite only where we can actually discuss football. I know other boards have it
Do you goofballs think he caught the AIDS? How does a young, growing man go from 190 in HS to 200 at USC to 175?
Next thing you know, the carnival barking weight guessers on CIS will have Bolden outweighed by amoeba.
They’re parakeet morons. They hear one clown weigh Bolden via photograph and then they all chirp out the same dumb ****. Bolden is an incredible addition to our secondary.We have guys doing what they made fun of al Golden for. That dude didn’t lose 20-30 pounds , stop.
Thank you. ...was wondering when this fact would be presented.You are wrong! The "s" is used with the verb, and the "c" with the noun. The noun is "practiCe". The verb is "practiSe" These are the facts!
The noun practice
As a noun, practice means a “habit or custom” (as in a religious practice).
It can also mean “repeated exercise to acquire a skill” (e.g., practice makes perfect), or “the pursuit of a profession” (e.g., she just retired from her medical practice).
This noun sense of practice is used by both British and American English.
The verb practice/practise
In American English, practice is also used as the verb. It means “to do something repeatedly in order to master it” or “to pursue as an occupation or art.” So a churchgoer can practice their religion, just as a student might practice the violin.
In British English, the verb form of the word is rendered as practise. So in the above examples, our churchgoer practises their religion, while our student practices their instrument. This convention is true of British, Canadian, and Australian English.
Twelve posts in seven years and you ****ed one away *****ing about the correct spelling of an inside joke?Thank you. ...was wondering when this fact would be presented.