This is it, ladies and gentlemen. This is the whole reason they made this show. https://t.co/MCRfGCVXz9
— The Critical Drinker (@TheCriticalDri2) August 19, 2022
i got catcalled once, made me feel p good tbh
— get in loser, we're going honking (@worldsworstgirl) August 19, 2022
#Caturday pic.twitter.com/XtwuRWILbi
— Bob Kostic (@causticbob) August 20, 2022
Who Noob Tales: Nine Lives… No, Really https://t.co/ecURHJJm9K via @Roobeedoo1 pic.twitter.com/mJjwjs4iB0
— RooBeeDoo (@RooBeeDoo1) April 14, 2018
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As is the way of things I bought this T shirt earlier this morning in Red Pill.
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You’re big cat animal guide is definitely λιοντάρι 😉
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meander_(art)
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You do know a lot !!!
1570s, “confusion, intricacy” (a sense now obsolete), from Latin meander “a winding course,” from Greek Maiandros, name of a river in Caria noted for its winding course (the Greeks used the name figuratively for winding patterns). In English in reference to river courses from 1590s. Sense of “a winding course, a winding or turning in a passage” is from 1630s. Adjectival forms that have been tried are meandrine (1846); meandrous (1650s); meandrian (c. 1600); meandry (1610s).
meander (v.)
“flow in a winding course” (of rivers), 1610s, from meander (n.). Of a person or persons, “to travel on a meandering river” (1821), then “to wander aimlessly” (1831), which was perhaps influenced by confusion with maunder [OED]. Related: Meandered; meandering.
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