Fact:
English people stopped using the word 'tup' in that sense about 2000 years ago. Except with reference to sheep.
( ,
Sat 21 Jun 2003, 22:20,
archived)
Oh oh!
Another revelation!
You cook chicken in a chicker...
So, you could say, putting something in a chicker means it has been 'chicked'
Or, in the superlative past tense "It has become chicken!"
Well, that answers the age old question...
( ,
Sat 21 Jun 2003, 22:24,
archived)
You cook chicken in a chicker...
So, you could say, putting something in a chicker means it has been 'chicked'
Or, in the superlative past tense "It has become chicken!"
Well, that answers the age old question...
A chicker, really
Look on the back of a poultry restaurant, they have a big room called a "chicker"
it's a storage / cooking room...thing. Like a meat locker, only hot.
( ,
Sat 21 Jun 2003, 22:30,
archived)
it's a storage / cooking room...thing. Like a meat locker, only hot.
your usage of the word 'you' was duplicitous.
almost no-one uses a 'chicker'. poultry restaurants count for approximately 0.000000000000000002% of all the world's cooking. you should have said, "poultry restaurants cook chicken using a 'chicker'".
and you should have stopped drinking hours ago.
( ,
Sat 21 Jun 2003, 22:32,
archived)
and you should have stopped drinking hours ago.
Oh, oh!
Here's one:
Chimney sweeps are the plumbers of the sky!
Plumbers are to water, as chimney sweeps are to FIRE....whoaaaaaa.
( ,
Sat 21 Jun 2003, 22:34,
archived)
Chimney sweeps are the plumbers of the sky!
Plumbers are to water, as chimney sweeps are to FIRE....whoaaaaaa.
NUFC!
He is out tupping your white ewe - Othello, nasty Racist Shakespeare.
Last week.
( ,
Sat 21 Jun 2003, 22:24,
archived)
Last week.