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fly on the wall
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8/29/2008 2:59:54 PM
Does anyone else find it troubling that the word for punctuation at the end of a sentence also means a woman's menstral cycle?
Can you magine if there really was a "period" at the end of every sentence you spoke? What would the world be like if all you did was go around from one PMS babe to another, coming at you with frying pans and hurled ashtrays, speaking with utter venom when you did nothing wrong?
Is a woman's menstral cycle just a monthly reminder that women do not have a penis, thus they can go around despising anyone who does during the deadly PMS realm?
Do you notice I've only asked questions in this blog so I didn't have to type a period?
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satch
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8/29/2008 3:25:19 PM
click me
:)
(requires Real Audio playback!!!)
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8/29/2008 3:41:05 PM
ha ha
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Jesse Adams
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8/29/2008 8:32:49 PM
Haha, your blogs are funny. I got a good chuckle from this one, thank you sir. :)
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reverse
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8/30/2008 1:04:49 AM
In the UK, we say that a woman is having her 'full stop'. For example, we might say 'What's the matter with you? Got your full stop or something??', 'I can't tonight, my husband, I'm having my full stop', 'I've started my full stops at long last' or 'Excuse me, Mr Pharmacist - do you have anything for a heavy full stop?'.
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Frylock
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10/12/2009 5:42:08 PM
I thought the punctuation at the end of a sentence that also means a woman's menstral cycle was "exclamation point" .
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