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Random Thoughts
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Re: Re: Random Thoughts
03/15/13 8:12 am | #13126
Quote by X:
the game of thrones (xbox) turned around when it hit the 10th chapter, i was soooo bored playing it till just now, just past the part where mores fights the douche helmet guy in an honor duel, i may start watching the show, can someone give me a genral summary of what the show follows?
The show don't fuck around. Just watch it. The game does it no justice.
Re: Re: Random Thoughts
03/15/13 8:15 am | #13127
Quote by Minioger:
Wasn't it "Et tu, Brute?"
Been a while since I've read Shakespeare...
no, the guy's name who betrayed Julius Caesar was Cassius Brutus.
Re: Re: Re: Random Thoughts
03/15/13 10:36 am | #13128
Quote by isaidgofly:
Quote by Minioger:
Wasn't it "Et tu, Brute?"
Been a while since I've read Shakespeare...
no, the guy's name who betrayed Julius Caesar was Cassius Brutus.
And Brutus in Latin is Brute. Mini is correct.
Quote by Junior:
Quote by X:
the game of thrones (xbox) turned around when it hit the 10th chapter, i was soooo bored playing it till just now, just past the part where mores fights the douche helmet guy in an honor duel, i may start watching the show, can someone give me a genral summary of what the show follows?
The show don't fuck around. Just watch it. The game does it no justice.
No shit, dude- listen to Junior.
The show doesn't follow the game at all, it follows the books. The game was set woven between the first and 2nd books, I believe, and it's nowhere near as brutal or wonderful as either the show or the books.
12/31/69 7:00 pm | #13129
Re: Re: Re: Re: Random Thoughts
03/15/13 1:14 pm | #13130
Quote by Kat:
Quote by isaidgofly:
no, the guy's name who betrayed Julius Caesar was Cassius Brutus.
And Brutus in Latin is Brute. Mini is correct.
Quote by Junior:
The show don't fuck around. Just watch it. The game does it no justice.
No shit, dude- listen to Junior.
The show doesn't follow the game at all, it follows the books. The game was set woven between the first and 2nd books, I believe, and it's nowhere near as brutal or wonderful as either the show or the books.
which reminds me, don't forget the show starts march 31st everyone!
Re: Random Thoughts
03/15/13 3:19 pm | #13131
Yes X you definitely have to watch Game of Thrones. It is freaking superb!
Shakespeare was a hack; George R R Martin is way gooder at writing!!
Apparently there's something about putting R R in your name that makes your books great.
J.R.R. Tolkien, George R R Martin... when I start writing I'll have to do it as Reverend R R
Meta.
12/31/69 7:00 pm | #13132
Re: Random Thoughts
03/16/13 2:29 am | #13133
I had a crotch rocket with two R's....and it Was Bad Ass too.
Re: Random Thoughts
03/16/13 3:11 am | #13134
Re: Re: Random Thoughts
03/16/13 4:08 am | #13135
Quote by The Snapple Cap:
I'm fucked up
You? What odd behavior. I would have never thought you were capable of getting fucked up.
Re: Re: Re: Random Thoughts
03/16/13 4:10 am | #13136
Quote by ShadowMachine X:
Quote by The Snapple Cap:
I'm fucked up
You? What odd behavior. I would have never thought you were capable of getting fucked up.
First thing that always pops into my head when I think of Snapple is attention whore
Re: Re: Re: Re: Random Thoughts
03/16/13 4:41 am | #13137
Quote by Circus:
Quote by ShadowMachine X:
You? What odd behavior. I would have never thought you were capable of getting fucked up.
First thing that always pops into my head when I think of Snapple is attention whore
...not the first or last comparison to a whore I've been called before
Re: Re: Re: Random Thoughts
03/16/13 6:29 am | #13138
Quote by isaidgofly:
Quote by Minioger:
Wasn't it "Et tu, Brute?"
Been a while since I've read Shakespeare...
no, the guy's name who betrayed Julius Caesar was Cassius Brutus.
Quote by about.com:
The vocative case is used to address someone by name, much as we would say in English, "Peter, please pass the pepper" or "Please pass the pepper, Peter." The comma after or before the name serves to set off the person addressed from the rest of the sentence. Latin uses a separate case for this function -- the vocative. In most instances, the case of the vocative is indistinguishable from the nominative, but in the masculine singular of certain second declension nouns, the "-us" ending becomes "-e" (as in "Et tu, Brute") and the "-ius" ending becomes "-i."
Brutus is Latin as well, but in this case the vocative tense is used.
I'm pretty sure Shakespeare and Poe both would have had R.R. in their names if they were writers in the 20th or 21st centuries....
Re: Random Thoughts
03/16/13 10:18 am | #13139
Re: Re: Re: Re: Random Thoughts
03/16/13 10:30 am | #13140
Quote by Minioger:
Quote by isaidgofly:
no, the guy's name who betrayed Julius Caesar was Cassius Brutus.
Quote by about.com:
The vocative case is used to address someone by name, much as we would say in English, "Peter, please pass the pepper" or "Please pass the pepper, Peter." The comma after or before the name serves to set off the person addressed from the rest of the sentence. Latin uses a separate case for this function -- the vocative. In most instances, the case of the vocative is indistinguishable from the nominative, but in the masculine singular of certain second declension nouns, the "-us" ending becomes "-e" (as in "Et tu, Brute") and the "-ius" ending becomes "-i."
Brutus is Latin as well, but in this case the vocative tense is used.
I'm pretty sure Shakespeare and Poe both would have had R.R. in their names if they were writers in the 20th or 21st centuries....
I'm pretty sure if you were a writer yours would have SS before it instead.
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