|
Trebek posted:What is a pit potty? Even google didn't help. I think that's a really worn down British take on "it's all gone to poo poo." The usual phrase is "it's gone a bit poo poo" then if you're trying to be polite it would be "it's gone a bit potty" then mispelled bit. e: one hell of a snype
|
# ? Jan 30, 2020 20:44 |
|
|
# ? May 27, 2024 02:46 |
|
Potty is also a very Little England term meaning 'crazy'.
|
# ? Jan 30, 2020 20:52 |
|
I thought the post was about to veer into some Nextdoor style anti-pitbull rage.
|
# ? Jan 30, 2020 21:39 |
|
kimbo305 posted:Oh so that's a line from Frozen? Oh, maybe it's more believable if the toddler was watching that movie all the time. A bit jealous of your life that you don't have Let it Go memorized
|
# ? Jan 30, 2020 23:12 |
|
Trebek posted:What is a pit potty? Even google didn't help. I’m assuming “pit” is a typo for “bit”, and “potty” can apparently be British slang for “crazy”. Edit: I apparently missed that a new page started, so enjoy this very out of date information.
|
# ? Jan 31, 2020 03:15 |
|
I figured she hosed up Pity Party.
|
# ? Jan 31, 2020 05:00 |
|
It's a latrine.
|
# ? Jan 31, 2020 05:28 |
|
Saw this on community FB page, it's so bad I almost think it's a parody, but it doesn't really go for it. I think I got brain damage just reading it. No, I did not crop it.
|
# ? Feb 9, 2020 02:24 |
|
Amen
|
# ? Feb 9, 2020 02:34 |
|
god kills
|
# ? Feb 9, 2020 02:35 |
|
“And the very next day I dawned dead.”
|
# ? Feb 9, 2020 08:40 |
|
but what a lie
|
# ? Feb 9, 2020 08:55 |
|
Sir Lemming posted:Saw this on community FB page, it's so bad I almost think it's a parody, but it doesn't really go for it. I think I got brain damage just reading it. Amen type gods are no longer supported in this version of reality.
|
# ? Feb 9, 2020 09:03 |
|
isoprenaline posted:“And the very next day I dawned dead.” And then John was a zombie
|
# ? Feb 9, 2020 15:35 |
|
Jesus please stop bothering me I've blocked you on like 5 different accounts already it's honestly getting kind of creepy, that 3 days you were gone for some reason was the most relief I've felt in ages
|
# ? Feb 9, 2020 15:41 |
|
The girl with irony laughed,
|
# ? Feb 10, 2020 13:37 |
|
a fatguy baldspot posted:The girl with irony laughed, Oh, is this the new Nordic noir novel everyone's talking about
|
# ? Feb 10, 2020 14:09 |
|
kimbo305 posted:Oh so that's a line from Frozen? Oh, maybe it's more believable if the toddler was watching that movie all the time. People in this thread routinely have nfi what little kids are actually like. this is a two year old doing the entire elsa dance from Frozen: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IuoYI_3sAyM https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=moSFlvxnbgk
|
# ? Feb 12, 2020 23:09 |
|
sebmojo posted:People in this thread routinely have nfi what little kids are actually like. seriously, some of y'all have never met a small child. my 5-year-old is mildly famous among her teachers for having an eidectic memory for song lyrics, it's not that unusual for kids to obsessively memorize things they like until they can mimic them perfectly. At length. Whether you like it or not.
|
# ? Feb 13, 2020 14:48 |
|
TheKennedys posted:seriously, some of y'all have never met a small child. my 5-year-old is mildly famous among her teachers for having an eidectic memory for song lyrics, it's not that unusual for kids to obsessively memorize things they like until they can mimic them perfectly. At length. Whether you like it or not. There is a difference between just reciting song lyrics and using a phrase from the song to make a coherent joke. The story says 'toddler', and small children usually struggle with the latter, although it's not completely beyond the realms of possibility.
|
# ? Feb 13, 2020 15:17 |
|
My daughter has some of her favorite books memorized word for word, including longer more complicated ones, and will frequently read other books and weave her own stories incorporating what she sees in the pictures with the books she has memorized, and she's two and a half. Little kids are capable of surprising stuff.
|
# ? Feb 13, 2020 16:33 |
|
Paladinus posted:There is a difference between just reciting song lyrics and using a phrase from the song to make a coherent joke. The story says 'toddler', and small children usually struggle with the latter, although it's not completely beyond the realms of possibility. Yeah, it's not the recall of a popular children's movie that seems implausible, it's the razor-sharp comedic timing that made everyone clap.
|
# ? Feb 13, 2020 17:16 |
|
shit_that_didnt_happen.txt: the next day she dawned dead
|
# ? Feb 13, 2020 17:25 |
|
The Pirate Captain posted:My daughter has some of her favorite books memorized word for word, including longer more complicated ones, and will frequently read other books and weave her own stories incorporating what she sees in the pictures with the books she has memorized, and she's two and a half. Little kids are capable of surprising stuff. I've had really young clients on the spectrum memorize entire seasons of tv shows and recite them back. It honestly makes me embarassed when I can't even remember my anniversary but this kid can rattle off several thousand lines of Ninjago.
|
# ? Feb 13, 2020 17:36 |
|
Wordslut is a really good book, but some of the anecdotes have a whiff of the old stdh:quote:For all of my teenage years, catcalling distressed me so much that whenever it happened, I simply kept my head down and didn’t react. But in my early twenties, after having tickled my inner revolutionary with the teachings of a gender and language class or two, I decided to try my hand at confronting them. Because I’d heard that many men who do this are just looking for a quick reaction, and that a smile or the flick of a middle finger were considered equal successes, I tried to give my catcallers something less expected. quote:I was nineteen, working between classes at NYU as a babysitter for a professor’s daughter, who attended a prep school on the Upper East Side of Manhattan. The kid was in the same grade as another girl with a mother who wore tweed skirt suits, had hair the color of a daffodil, and grew up in a family that valued proper elocution and manners above all else—principles she was intent on passing down to her own daughter.
|
# ? Feb 13, 2020 18:32 |
|
Dienes posted:I've had really young clients on the spectrum memorize entire seasons of tv shows and recite them back. It honestly makes me embarassed when I can't even remember my anniversary but this kid can rattle off several thousand lines of Ninjago. I don't see how the latter would help you if you forget your anniversary. I'm fact I bet it would make the situation worse!
|
# ? Feb 13, 2020 20:30 |
|
Jerry Cotton posted:I don't see how the latter would help you if you forget your anniversary. I'm fact I bet it would make the situation worse! It's like you've never heard of romance.
|
# ? Feb 14, 2020 01:39 |
|
yeah one of my clients will use entire episodes of sponge bob to communicate and it owns.
|
# ? Feb 14, 2020 01:43 |
|
REminds me of that Rebecca Sugar comic about the brothers who communicated in Simpsons quotes.
|
# ? Feb 14, 2020 10:32 |
|
a fatguy baldspot posted:yeah one of my clients will use entire episodes of sponge bob to communicate and it owns. my aforementioned kindergartner is mildly autistic, and yeah, up until pretty recently she talked basically in her own code made up of finding a song that fit what you were asking her and singing it as a response. It's weird to explain but very similar, she'd "talk" entirely in Dora/Bubble Guppies quotes and her library of songs. She just started finding and using her own words maybe last summer and she still chooses to make up little songs about what she's doing half the time. Kids, especially on the spectrum, are really honestly capable of some weird and hilarious connections in a brain that hasn't been taught it shouldn't do that.
|
# ? Feb 14, 2020 18:35 |
|
I am also autistic with low support needs. When I was preschool age I had trouble structuring my own sentences, so I often found it easier to use a contextually-appropriate Disney quote.
|
# ? Feb 14, 2020 19:09 |
|
I know using Trump is generally cheating, but it's not every day the POTUS tells a literal "everyone stood up and clapped" STDH: https://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/trump-geraldo-rivera-interview-white-house-vindman-applause quote:Trump then claimed that “Vindman was the guy that, when we took him out of the building, the building applauded.”
|
# ? Feb 14, 2020 19:20 |
|
Jurgan posted:I know using Trump is generally cheating, but it's not every day the POTUS tells a literal "everyone stood up and clapped" STDH: When Donald Trump tells STDH, he replaces all instances of “Albert Einstein” with “Donald Trump”.
|
# ? Feb 14, 2020 21:45 |
|
Jurgan posted:I know using Trump is generally cheating, but it's not every day the POTUS tells a literal "everyone stood up and clapped" STDH: Out in the East Wing, Melania's staff who have nothing else to do suddenly stand up and begin to clap. They do not know why.
|
# ? Feb 14, 2020 22:16 |
|
It seems "many people" show up in a lot of Trumps stories. Also their twin brother, "some people". As in, "who some people call Pocahontas ". Pretty sure they're the same people as John Harris and John Barron. Probably John Bigbootie, too.
|
# ? Feb 14, 2020 23:59 |
|
MrUnderbridge posted:It seems "many people" show up in a lot of Trumps stories. Also their twin brother, "some people". As in, "who some people call Pocahontas ". Bigboo-TAY!
|
# ? Feb 15, 2020 00:25 |
|
https://twitter.com/jhaleauthor/status/1228107468540186625?s=21
|
# ? Feb 15, 2020 17:16 |
|
Most egregious one I've ever seen. He could have been on fire and rushing to jump in a lake, with the Pope and Mr. Rogers begging everyone to stay seated and let him by, and a dozen people still would have obliviously jumped up the second the seatbelt sign went off and blithely ignored the sizzling and screaming behind them as they futzed with their overhead luggage.
|
# ? Feb 15, 2020 17:38 |
Good thing he went down the entire aisle telling every single person on the flight (including the flight attendants) that they had to sit still and let him run off first because he’s the most important passenger.
|
|
# ? Feb 15, 2020 18:01 |
|
|
# ? May 27, 2024 02:46 |
|
I assume he told an attendant who then just made the announcement to everyone.
|
# ? Feb 15, 2020 18:03 |