Brian Eleven:
Could someone point me to some indication that this guy is "enlightened"?
Clearly admins must believe him to be because no one else would be given the leeway to to post so much indecipherable...text. (This is also taking into account his disadvantage of having being born in Winnipeg.)
I'm starting to get the feeling he's just here for his own amusement and to piss people off, which is the definition of a troll, no?
Thanks,
Brian.
I dunno Brian, could you point me to a thread where I described ma'sef ass embalism'ed? 'Cuz ah canna recollec' a heaven ever sed so. Perhaps some one else is attempting to make anas outa U and this U?
Let me put it to you this way, I is what I is. Or Eye am what eye am?
So on this Saturn Day of December 2013, my fellow peeps, let me axe U's what U seas?
"My fellow Aquariums, what swims in your oceanic embodiments?"
And, "have a nice tidal time".
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=0)))0>
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-triplethink.??.//..nathan
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footnotes:
Troll:
from:
Trolltroll (n.) Look up troll at Dictionary.com
"ugly dwarf or giant," 1610s, from Old Norse troll "giant, fiend, demon." Some speculate that it originally meant "creature that walks clumsily," and derives from Proto-Germanic *truzlan, from *truzlanan (see troll (v.)). But it seems to have been a general supernatural word, cf. Swedish trolla "to charm, bewitch;" Old Norse trolldomr "witchcraft."
The old sagas tell of the troll-bull, a supernatural being in the form of a bull, as well as boar-trolls. There were troll-maidens, troll-wives, and troll-women; the trollman, a magician or wizard, and the troll-drum, used in Lappish magic rites. The word was popularized in English by 19c. antiquarians, but it has been current in the Shetlands and Orkneys since Viking times. The first record of it is from a court document from the Shetlands, regarding a certain Catherine, who, among other things, was accused of "airt and pairt of witchcraft and sorcerie, in hanting and seeing the Trollis ryse out of the kyrk yeard of Hildiswick."
Originally conceived as a race of giants, they have suffered the same fate as the Celtic Danann and are now regarded in Denmark and Sweden as dwarfs and imps supposed to live in caves or under the ground.
trolley (n.) Look up trolley at Dictionary.com
1823, in Suffolk dialect, "a cart," especially one with wheels flanged for running on a track (1858), probably from troll (v.) in the sense of "to roll." Sense transferred to "pulley to convey current to a streetcar motor" (1890), then "streetcar drawing power by a trolley" (1891).
trollop Look up trollop at Dictionary.com
1610s, "slovenly woman," probably from troll (v.) in sense of "roll about, wallow."
certain Anne Hayward, wife of Gregory Hayward of Beighton, did in the parishe church of Beighton aforesaid in the time of Divine Service or Sermon there, and when the Minister was reading & praying, violently & boisterously presse & enter into the seat or place where one Elizabeth, wife of Robert Spurlinir, was quietly at her Devotion & Duty to Almighty God and then and there did quarrel chide & braule & being evilly & inalitiously bent did use then and there many rayleing opprobrious Speeches & Invectives against the said Elizabeth calling her Tripe & Trallop, to the great disturbance both of the Minister and Congregation. [Archdeaconry of Sudbury, Suffolk, Court Proceedings, 1682]
troll (v.) Look up troll at Dictionary.com
late 14c., "to go about, stroll," later (early 15c.) "roll from side to side, trundle," from Old French troller, a hunting term, "wander, to go in quest of game without purpose," from a Germanic source (cf. Old High German trollen "to walk with short steps"), from Proto-Germanic *truzlanan.
Sense of "sing in a full, rolling voice" (first attested 1570s) and that of "fish with a moving line" (c.1600) are both extended technical applications of the general sense of "roll, trundle," the latter perhaps confused with trail or trawl. Figurative sense of "to draw on as with a moving bait, entice, allure" is from 1560s. Meaning "to cruise in search of sexual encounters" is recorded from 1967, originally in homosexual slang.
droll (adj.) Look up droll at Dictionary.com
1620s, from French drôle "odd, comical, funny" (1580s), in Middle French a noun meaning "a merry fellow," possibly from Middle Dutch drol "fat little fellow, goblin," or Middle High German trolle "clown," ultimately from Old Norse troll "giant, troll" (see troll (n.)). Related: Drolly; drollish.
trull (n.) Look up trull at Dictionary.com
"a low prostitute or concubine; a drab, strumpet, trollop" , 1510s, from German trulle, perhaps cognate with troll (n.), or perhaps from troll (v.), cf. Middle High German trolle "awkward fellow."