A place for the discussion of all things not closely related to the sport and its competitive side. (Locked down several times a year during the major championships)
jeremyp wrote:Can I start up a new thread about a gun totting hooker who has mental health issues or will that land me in banishment???
Well let's see. In this section there are 3 closed threads, and you managed to hit all three topics in one sentence. Thus the answer should be rather obvious.....but who knows...
Therefore, this thread is about prostitutes who count guns. Presumably their pimps have them do that during their down-time (pun?). The conversation would go something like this:
Hey Trixie, go down to my Laundomat (the front for his business), go into the back room and see how many gats I got.
gh wrote:you might get banned for spelling deficiencies...
Me, my children and children's children may get banned for this but "totting" is in the urban dictionary and gun totting...well as Casey Stengel used to say, "You can look it up."
My wife Lorelie, just got back from a Newton funeral of a little girl she used to hold in her arms, I didnt want to go,but I think humor is the great healer.
Marlow wrote:the verb 'to tot' means to total or add/sum up. ....
not to the Brits it doesn't.
cullman wrote:Me, my children and children's children may get banned for this but "totting" is in the urban dictionary and gun totting...well as Casey Stengel used to say, "You can look it up."
Is this what you mean?
UrbanDict wrote:Totting - The actions taken by prostitots, or tots.
Hookers are called tots?! Gives a whole new meaning to the neighborhood playground called a 'tot lot'.
So the thread title becomes "Gun hooking hookers" (??!!)
cullman wrote:Me, my children and children's children may get banned for this but "totting" is in the urban dictionary and gun totting...well as Casey Stengel used to say, "You can look it up."
Is this what you mean?
UrbanDict wrote:Totting - The actions taken by prostitots, or tots.
It's this part after that, "verb: The actions taken by prostitots, or tots, during their path of destruction, a.k.a. p nis consumption."
I notice that the "o"is next to the "i" on the QWERTY keyboard. So perhaps jeremyp meant "tit" and not "tot". And given the between the lines innuendos perhaps "titting" makes more sense than "totting".
I notice that the "o"is next to the "i" on the QWERTY keyboard. So perhaps jeremyp meant "tit" and not "tot". And given the between the lines innuendos perhaps "titting" makes more sense than "totting".
No it means I did not use spell check, and as my Grandson reminds me: "You are old, very, very old!" Or perhaps, considering age, it was a Freudian slip for tooting?
Last edited by jeremyp on Sun Dec 23, 2012 10:59 am, edited 1 time in total.
Well I think the village has now sorted out the totting,the toting, the toteing, and the titting.
So, given the gravity of this subject matter, all the village has to do now, before Xmas, is to make sure we are all on the same page. Which means we have to make sure we understand the meaning (subliminal or otherwise) of "gun" and "hookers".
When I was doing my basic training at Fort Leonard Wood in 1974 running around in woods of central Missouri I was taught in no uncertain manner "This is my weapon, this is my gun, this is for fighting and this is for fun". So I guess "gun" is appropriate for the heading of this thread.
"Hookers" . Is Suzy in any way connected to that famous pole vaulter from West Island?
Tuariki wrote:When I was doing my basic training at Fort Leonard Wood in 1974 running around in woods of central Missouri I was taught in no uncertain manner "This is my weapon, this is my gun, this is for fighting and this is for fun". So I guess "gun" is appropriate for the heading of this thread.
Small world. I too scampered through the woods at Ft. Leonard Wood two decades before that chanting that same ubiquitous ditty..also, in my experience, popular at Fort Bevoir, Fort Hood, Fort Jackson, Fort Sill, Fort Carson, Fort Polk, Camp Ripley and.....
Tuariki wrote:When I was doing my basic training at Fort Leonard Wood in 1974 running around in woods of central Missouri I was taught in no uncertain manner "This is my weapon, this is my gun, this is for fighting and this is for fun". So I guess "gun" is appropriate for the heading of this thread.
Small world. I too scampered through the woods at Ft. Leonard Wood two decades before that chanting that same ubiquitous ditty..also, in my experience, popular at Fort Bevoir, Fort Hood, Fort Jackson, Fort Sill, Fort Carson, Fort Polk, Camp Ripley and.....
Tuariki wrote:When I was doing my basic training at Fort Leonard Wood in 1974 running around in woods of central Missouri I was taught in no uncertain manner "This is my weapon, this is my gun, this is for fighting and this is for fun". So I guess "gun" is appropriate for the heading of this thread.
Small world. I too scampered through the woods at Ft. Leonard Wood two decades before that chanting that same ubiquitous ditty..also, in my experience, popular at Fort Bevoir, Fort Hood, Fort Jackson, Fort Sill, Fort Carson, Fort Polk, Camp Ripley and.....
Ft. Dix and Ft. Jackson, where the Sgt told us to fall out on the Roay (Road). Southern I guess. Remember the "Rifles in little bunches, bunch" story?