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Thread: *** The TRAIN ***
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06-27-2008, 09:38 AM #3761
I just like to feel appreciated

I'm such a sucker for positive reinforcement
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06-27-2008, 09:47 AM #3762
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06-27-2008, 09:51 AM #3763
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06-27-2008, 09:54 AM #3764
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06-27-2008, 10:00 AM #3765
So far I've been called hasty, wreckless and a bitch this week. That's a pretty good one
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06-27-2008, 10:00 AM #3766
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06-27-2008, 10:00 AM #3767
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06-27-2008, 10:01 AM #3768
Brad you missed it! Last night was free blow job night for the first LS1.com member to show up at my house
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06-27-2008, 10:03 AM #3769
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06-27-2008, 10:04 AM #3770
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06-27-2008, 10:08 AM #3771
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06-27-2008, 10:09 AM #3772
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06-27-2008, 10:12 AM #3773
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06-27-2008, 10:13 AM #3774O U 8 1 2
- Join Date
- Nov 1999
- Location
- over here...
- Age
- 47
- Posts
- 25,709
[]D [] []V[] []D- 1999 trans am
Word of the Day
Friday June 27, 2008
Today's Word | Yesterday's Word | Previous Words | Subscribe for Free | Help
harbinger \HAR-bin-juhr\, noun:
1. (Archaic) One who provides lodgings; especially, the officer of the English royal household who formerly preceded the court when traveling, to provide and prepare lodgings.
2. A forerunner; a precursor; one that presages or foreshadows what is to come.
transitive verb:
1. To signal the approach of; to presage; to be a harbinger of.
Comets have been mistakenly interpreted by humans in times past as harbingers of doom, foretelling famine, plague, and destruction.
-- Walter Alvarez, T. Rex and the Crater of Doom
More than the steamboat, more than anything else, the railroads were the harbinger of the future, and the future was the Industrial Revolution.
-- Stephen E. Ambrose, Nothing Like It In the World
The airy draughts felt to him like the undoing of everything, the unfastening of ties, a harbinger of chaos.
-- Pauline Melville, The Ventriloquist's Tale
Harbinger, which originally signified a person sent ahead to arrange lodgings, derives from Middle English herbergeour, "one who supplies lodgings," from Old French herbergeor, from herbergier, "to provide lodging for," from herberge, "a lodging, an inn" (cp. modern French auberge), ultimately of Germanic origin.
Dictionary.com Entry and Pronunciation for harbinger
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06-27-2008, 10:18 AM #3775
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06-27-2008, 10:19 AM #3776
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06-27-2008, 10:21 AM #3777
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06-27-2008, 10:25 AM #3778doesn'tplaywellwithothers
- Join Date
- Jan 2007
- Location
- Mayberry....(Indiana)
- Posts
- 1,634
Black- 2004 GTO
I have a car show 2nite.....whoooohoooo.....I think Im gonna win.....the competition isnt very stiff....I cleaned up the GOAT...detailed it so well P would be proud...I better snap some pics...
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06-27-2008, 10:26 AM #3779
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06-27-2008, 10:26 AM #3780Just me
- Join Date
- Nov 2006
- Location
- Broken Arrow, OK
- Age
- 50
- Posts
- 23,345
Pewter metallic- 2000 Camaro SS
Lowes
me
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I LIKE TURTLES!!!

Although I find the majority of people SUCK!!!!!!!!!
....LOL


i live randomly...

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