Ink Pen by Phil Dunlap for July 17, 2010

  1. Senmurv
    mrsullenbeauty  almost 14 years ago

    Oh, Hamhock … at least no one cut your head off and held it up in the window.

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  2. Zappa sheik
    ksoskins  almost 14 years ago

    Well Hamhock you learned two things:

    An adventure is best left to people like Tyr. Tyr is infatuated with Wonder Woman and her Lasso of Truth.
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  3. V  9
    freeholder1  almost 14 years ago

    And she would love Tyr’s Axle of Semi-truth.

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  4. What has been seen t1
    lewisbower  almost 14 years ago

    They are dressing Wonder Woman, not better but more. Take your last look at those legs guys, they’re gone. Oh, I don’t look at the pictures, I just read the story..

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  5. Zappa sheik
    ksoskins  almost 14 years ago

    More to the point, you can’t handle Wonder Woman, although I’m sure you’d like to try.

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  6. Thrill
    fritzoid Premium Member almost 14 years ago

    WW’s had costume redesigns before, and I’m sure this won’t be the last.

    Just so long as Ms. Amazement doesn’t follow suit (so to speak), it makes no difference to me anyway.

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  7. Georg von rosen   oden som vandringsman  1886  odin  the wanderer
    runar  almost 14 years ago

    WW, in distant Khartoum Took Spider-man up to her room They argued all night Over who had the right To do what, with which ropes and to whom.

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  8. V  9
    freeholder1  almost 14 years ago

    Nope, eldo. A flirtatious womAn. Minks am plural.

    Vixen is singular.

    X-mas is foolish.

    Grammar rules. Go figure.

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  9. Thrill
    fritzoid Premium Member almost 14 years ago

    “X” as an abbreviation for “Christ” goes back almost to the earliest days of the church. Early Xian art and manuscripts used the symbol liberally (also “XP” and “Xt”), and those who’ve used the term “Xmas” in writings include Lord Byron, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., and the Rev. Charles Lutwidge Dodgson (“Lewis Carroll”). Noted fools all, I suppose.

    According to Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary of English Usage, most of the evidence for these words (“Xianity”, “Xmas”) comes from “educated Englishmen who knew their Greek”.

    What’s usually forgotten, though, is that “Xmas” is nonetheless properly pronouncedkris-mas”, and is only appropriate in informal writings (like internet forums), or other places (newspaper headlines and such) where concision is the norm.

    I suspect there’s also a vestige of the time-honored tradition (still observed in some communities) against writing out holy names (like “G_D”) on mundane documents that might be thrown away or otherwise destroyed.

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