Answer a Question with a Question
I think it goes into your ROM, and depending on your "Operating System" it just never leaves. Grandpa Red taught me "Righty tighty, Lefty loosy" when I was 3, how many times over the intervening 4+ decades do you think his words have run through my head?
Yeah I heard that too, but who makes a habit of pulling pig's tails?
Now dipping them in inkwells and tying them in nautical knots is something entirely different when you're eight and the teacher is boring.
Now dipping them in inkwells and tying them in nautical knots is something entirely different when you're eight and the teacher is boring.
Could it be that I am afraid that this "answer a question with a question" boutique of verbally unrelenting anomalies is slightly taking things to a level beyond that of the normal thinking man and turning your viewers minds into the proverbial blueberry pancakes that you guys are always sharing with each other and sunflowerhippie who will never get to taste the dripping strawberry syrup as it dribbles back to the plate feeling the cold texture of the syrup as it hits the hot pancakes in our minds eye?
(that mine friend, who I would defend to my death, is how you do "answer a question with a question", my jousting partner used to be harleyss and he hast since gone from this mental sparring. Actually Sunflowerhippie and freinds would get mad at us because we turned their many discussions upside down...)
(that mine friend, who I would defend to my death, is how you do "answer a question with a question", my jousting partner used to be harleyss and he hast since gone from this mental sparring. Actually Sunflowerhippie and freinds would get mad at us because we turned their many discussions upside down...)
"There is some dispute among historians as to what exactly constituted the Carolingian byrnie. Relying... only on artistic and some literary sources because of the lack of archaeological examples, some believe that it was a heavy leather jacket with metal scales sewn onto it. It was also quite long, reaching below the hips and covering most of the arms. Other historians claim instead that the Carolingian byrnie was nothing more than a coat of mail, but longer and perhaps heavier than traditional early medieval mail. Without more certain evidence, this dispute will continue".
Your thoughts Good Sir Knight?
Your thoughts Good Sir Knight?


