Originally posted by: artikk
the question here is what are you doing on facebook?
Originally posted by: pray4mojo
Originally posted by: artikk
the question here is what are you doing on facebook?
well thats a dumb question.
thats like asking you why you're on ATOT. 😀
Originally posted by: joedrake
Why's he have a rubber band on his cup
Originally posted by: LordMorpheus
What school is this picture from. The furniture looks like what we get at Rice, and the room could be a common room in one of the older colleges . . .
1. Why do you call an empty bottle a "bottle of soda", when it obviously does not contain a significant amount of soda?Originally posted by: OdiN
Why do you call a bottle of soda a cup?Originally posted by: joedrake
Why's he have a rubber band on his cup
Originally posted by: joedrake
1. Why do you call an empty bottle a "bottle of soda", when it obviously does not contain a significant amount of soda?Originally posted by: OdiN
Why do you call a bottle of soda a cup?Originally posted by: joedrake
Why's he have a rubber band on his cup
2. "Cup can refer to:
A drinking vessel such as a teacup or similar drinkware"
Drinking (sub-category Vessels):
"Vessels
Drinking vessels include glasses, cups, bottles, canteens, or even bowls in some cases."
Citation:
"Cup." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. 8 Apr 2006, 18:53 UTC. 14 Apr 2006, 17:54 <http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cup&oldid=47584463>.
"Drinking." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. 12 Apr 2006, 00:07 UTC. 14 Apr 2006, 17:54 <http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Drinking&oldid=48039005>.
Originally posted by: BW86
Originally posted by: joedrake
1. Why do you call an empty bottle a "bottle of soda", when it obviously does not contain a significant amount of soda?Originally posted by: OdiN
Why do you call a bottle of soda a cup?Originally posted by: joedrake
Why's he have a rubber band on his cup
2. "Cup can refer to:
A drinking vessel such as a teacup or similar drinkware"
Drinking (sub-category Vessels):
"Vessels
Drinking vessels include glasses, cups, bottles, canteens, or even bowls in some cases."
Citation:
"Cup." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. 8 Apr 2006, 18:53 UTC. 14 Apr 2006, 17:54 <http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cup&oldid=47584463>.
"Drinking." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. 12 Apr 2006, 00:07 UTC. 14 Apr 2006, 17:54 <http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Drinking&oldid=48039005>.
bottle ? cup
Originally posted by: Tick
My effort, or what can be done with 5 minute of subtle retouching.
Not according to wikipedia.org or m-w.org 😕Originally posted by: BW86
Originally posted by: joedrake
1. Why do you call an empty bottle a "bottle of soda", when it obviously does not contain a significant amount of soda?Originally posted by: OdiN
Why do you call a bottle of soda a cup?Originally posted by: joedrake
Why's he have a rubber band on his cup
2. "Cup can refer to:
A drinking vessel such as a teacup or similar drinkware"
Drinking (sub-category Vessels):
"Vessels
Drinking vessels include glasses, cups, bottles, canteens, or even bowls in some cases."
Citation:
"Cup." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. 8 Apr 2006, 18:53 UTC. 14 Apr 2006, 17:54 <http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cup&oldid=47584463>.
"Drinking." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. 12 Apr 2006, 00:07 UTC. 14 Apr 2006, 17:54 <http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Drinking&oldid=48039005>.
bottle ? cup
Originally posted by: CarlKillerMiller
The uniswoop is monstrous.