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Post by Moose on Feb 24, 2013 22:44:49 GMT
dum dum dum
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Post by Kye on Feb 24, 2013 23:49:17 GMT
What's a gib?
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Post by Moose on Feb 25, 2013 0:05:25 GMT
It means, I like the way you speak
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Post by Kye on Feb 25, 2013 0:18:22 GMT
And so I do!
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Post by Moose on Feb 25, 2013 0:39:27 GMT
heh well thank you but it was the poll who was asking, not me
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Post by Kye on Feb 25, 2013 1:08:22 GMT
Ah. I guess I like the way the poll speaks. Although I'm not really fluent in Pollish.
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Post by Moose on Feb 25, 2013 3:19:27 GMT
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Post by Moose on Feb 25, 2013 3:20:14 GMT
Prize for the first person who can correctly identify where the last option comes from without googling it
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Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
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Post by Deleted on Feb 25, 2013 11:22:12 GMT
Huh?
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Post by ceptimus on Feb 25, 2013 12:22:30 GMT
I think it should be spelled 'jib'. A jib is one of the foremost sails on a sailing ship, so it helps define the shape of the ship - it's the face of the ship, if you like. The, 'I do/don't like the cut of your/his/her/their jib' phrase is thought to have originated amongst sailors: different countries had different shaped jibs on their sailing ships, so the phrase was originally a sort of oblique reference as to whether or not a sailor liked the look of another person or group of people.
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Post by Shake on Feb 27, 2013 4:18:56 GMT
Perhaps.
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