Heckles II
It was my privilege the other month to see a particularly foul and abusive heckler literally chased out of a comedy club by enraged punters. So: Comedy nights, staff meetings, football matches. Tell us of epic or rubbish heckles.
( , Thu 12 Jun 2014, 14:36)
It was my privilege the other month to see a particularly foul and abusive heckler literally chased out of a comedy club by enraged punters. So: Comedy nights, staff meetings, football matches. Tell us of epic or rubbish heckles.
( , Thu 12 Jun 2014, 14:36)
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good thing I went back in time and spread this phrase all over the internet
( , Tue 17 Jun 2014, 15:48, 1 reply)
Just for a side by side comparisson:
www.googlefight.com/index.php?lang=en_GB&word1=%22clutching+at+straws%22&word2=%22drawing+at+strings%22
( , Tue 17 Jun 2014, 17:04, closed)
www.googlefight.com/index.php?lang=en_GB&word1=%22clutching+at+straws%22&word2=%22drawing+at+strings%22
( , Tue 17 Jun 2014, 17:04, closed)
That's great if you're in to using main-stream phrases.
I stopped using "clutching at straws" before it was cool to clutch at straws.
( , Tue 17 Jun 2014, 17:07, closed)
I stopped using "clutching at straws" before it was cool to clutch at straws.
( , Tue 17 Jun 2014, 17:07, closed)
And started using something that makes no sense, instead.
Why not just substitute gobbledygook words and phrases for everything you say?
( , Tue 17 Jun 2014, 17:10, closed)
Why not just substitute gobbledygook words and phrases for everything you say?
( , Tue 17 Jun 2014, 17:10, closed)
drawing at bow strings - trying to hit a target
makes a lot of sense
( , Tue 17 Jun 2014, 17:32, closed)
makes a lot of sense
( , Tue 17 Jun 2014, 17:32, closed)
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