Random Thoughts 5 - READ RULES IN FIRST POST

Ah man, once you get the hang of drawing eyes, they're actually really fun! I really like drawing eyes... and hair. Yeah, hair is fun. Hands on the other hand... eh, don't remind me. Hands are hell-on-earth in the drawing world.
Look what I saw...!

Isn't that squirrel cute? I saw it standing outside my window today.
Took it with my mother's new IPhone 5!

Anyone else get an IPhone 5? My mom got the black one, and I cannot exaggerate how light it feels, even though its a few mm longer. I has another, extra row for apps and it charges extremely fast. The sync is very speedy too. The IPhone 3S took 2 min to sync, and the IPhone 5 took 20 sec. to sync. Very big difference!

See my mom's Iphone here.
My mom got one too, and I laugh and say "Why do you always buy Apple stuff?" whenever she has trouble with Siri. But I guess it is kinda(AKA EXTREMELY) light.
can someone help me i want to know if there are certain beyblades that aren't aloud in tournaments
(Oct. 09, 2012  3:32 AM)thedillon123 Wrote: can someone help me i want to know if there are certain beyblades that aren't aloud in tournaments

This is not the topic for it. You can read the rules here :
http://worldbeyblade.org/universalrules.pdf
Tonight, I'm going to see if Tyson's wrist twist launch actually works with mfb's.
May we refer you to this post before you post anymore uninteresting Beyblade-related posts in this thread? Please? Thank you.
Well, my cul-de-sac friend I have to visit secretly because my mom is being a child over social standards, confirmed this bit of unpleasant information.

The people that live across from me are hoarders. The neighbors called every appropriate service and department with scoffs and getting brushed off at every opportunity. Worst of it is the friend I mention had to get on their rear ends on several things, only to get harassed by the drunk man living their. Texas needs serious help on a few things, sorry if that's an opinion I can't voice.
After about 3 weeks, I am finally using my laptop again! The charger for it finally stopped working a while ago and now I have a new one I bought off the internet. I've gotta say, it's a bit of a pain to try to post on an iPod Touch, so I'm glad I can use it again. I had a bunch of Beyblade stuff saved onto it.
Defstamina: As someone who lives in West Virginia, I can totally understand what you mean.
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Congrats WBO!
At school I did an odd drawing, then I wrote a story about it, then another drawing in social studies. I call him Sockman! Finally I wrote on a random sock with a Sharpie. HERE HE IS, SOCKMAN!
(Oct. 12, 2012  2:31 AM)Akio314 Wrote: At school I did an odd drawing, then I wrote a story about it, then another drawing in social studies. I call him Sockman! Finally I wrote on a random sock with a Sharpie. HERE HE IS, SOCKMAN!

Epic sock swag. I can't catch a beldam in pokemon daimond.
(Oct. 12, 2012  2:31 AM)Akio314 Wrote: At school I did an odd drawing, then I wrote a story about it, then another drawing in social studies. I call him Sockman! Finally I wrote on a random sock with a Sharpie. HERE HE IS, SOCKMAN!

Quite the imagination you have Tongue_out

If those socks were to become a worldwide thing, I'd buy a couple pair, lol.

That is worthy of a comic. Sock by day, watever he does by night
Hasbro and China-based Alpha Animation sign a collaboration and investment letter of intent for a long-term co-development partnership, under which the two will establish a Chinese joint venture company that will co-develop toys and games. Initially the partnership will focus on Alpha Animation's popular Blazing Teens TV series. Blazing Teens is a multi-season series about high schools in China and their Yo-Yo competitions. Additionally, a Hasbro property will be developed as well. Both projects will be developed together for China and global markets.

Just a frame of reference, Alpha Animation is part of the Chinese company that made the infamous King of Warrior EX, lol.
akio314 - Cool beans, bro!

It feels cool knowing that out of the 75002 members here, I am the only member who is a duck. I think.

Latin is driving me insane. All of the declensions are impossible! And they claim that English is the toughest language... Tired
(Oct. 12, 2012  7:29 AM)Duck of Hades Wrote: And they claim that English is the toughest language... Tired

Whoever said that ? English is one of the easiest, and French is certainly one of the hardest.
(Oct. 12, 2012  7:19 PM)Kai-V Wrote:
(Oct. 12, 2012  7:29 AM)Duck of Hades Wrote: And they claim that English is the toughest language... Tired

Whoever said that ? English is one of the easiest, and French is certainly one of the hardest.

Japanese, Chinese and Arabic say hi.

I guess french qualifies, just for the overly-complicated verb conjugations and the feminine/masculine articles that are literally a pain. I would not say "the hardest" though.
The hardest language is Music Notes......END OF DISCUSSION
(Oct. 12, 2012  10:58 PM)Insomniac. Wrote:
(Oct. 12, 2012  7:19 PM)Kai-V Wrote:
(Oct. 12, 2012  7:29 AM)Duck of Hades Wrote: And they claim that English is the toughest language... Tired

Whoever said that ? English is one of the easiest, and French is certainly one of the hardest.

Japanese, Chinese and Arabic say hi.

I guess french qualifies, just for the overly-complicated verb conjugations and the feminine/masculine articles that are literally a pain. I would not say "the hardest" though.

Japanese is quite easy if you have some base. Learn kanji is very difficult.

Ah, you forget portuguese, brazilian portuguese to be exact. Because the portuguese that you learn in classes are a little bit different of the talking.
(Oct. 12, 2012  7:19 PM)Kai-V Wrote:
(Oct. 12, 2012  7:29 AM)Duck of Hades Wrote: And they claim that English is the toughest language... Tired

Whoever said that ? English is one of the easiest, and French is certainly one of the hardest.

"Aluette, gentle aluette, alluette gentle plumare" I learned this in 6th grade. But I tend to forget my #'s after cinq.
(Oct. 13, 2012  12:29 AM)ButterflyKnight Wrote: Ah, you forget portuguese, brazilian portuguese to be exact. Because the portuguese that you learn in classes are a little bit different of the talking.

I am learning Portuguese, and since our teacher is from Brazil, she teaches us mostly the Brazilian Portuguese and its pronunciations. It seems easy enough.

Of course, both Spanish and Portuguese (and probably others) people will speak very quickly in normal circumstances, so it is difficult to follow them, but you can still know those languages very well.
I speak Portuguese, it wasn't hard for me to learn it. Maybe because it was my first language, haha. I think the hardest are Japanese, Chinese, Arabic,like what Duck said.
(Oct. 13, 2012  1:55 AM)earthwolf1404 Wrote:
(Oct. 12, 2012  7:19 PM)Kai-V Wrote:
(Oct. 12, 2012  7:29 AM)Duck of Hades Wrote: And they claim that English is the toughest language... Tired

Whoever said that ? English is one of the easiest, and French is certainly one of the hardest.

"Aluette, gentle aluette, alluette gentle plumare" I learned this in 6th grade. But I tend to forget my #'s after cinq.

Alouette, gentille alouette
Alouette, je te plumerai

The song is actually quite simple, and Pepé Le'Pew sang it often. We learned Frère Jacques as children, as well; when I first heard the song in English, many years later, it sounded considerably less interesting...

English is considered by many to be a difficult language to master if it is your second language, primarily if you're coming from a language where homonyms/synonyms are either not heavily used, or(in the case of homonyms) don't exist at all. There are actually a lot of very typical pronoun errors made even by long-time English-speakers if they learned English second. It is probably the most superfluously convoluted language there is, with far too many words that mean exactly the same thing.

I was always quite partial to French, but never had an opportunity to learn it in school - and at my age, learning a language would be rather difficult, and I just could not settle for being one of those people who will only ever speak a broken second language. I'll not insult it in such a way; I can simply avoid France, Nepal, Haiti, Montreal, New Orleans' French Quarter, and certain Bornean tribes.

Quebeciose French is especially rapid-fire, and most of my experience around French speakers from Montreal has been me struggling to listen for the Francophone pronunciation of my own name, but otherwise completely lost in a sandstorm of foreign words. New Orleans French just sounds odd and stilted, but I grew up around it.
I certainly cannot understand how "native anglophones" can make mistakes with homonymes like it's/its, theirs/there's, there/their/they're, etc.