No, but I can make it my own by adjusting the punctuation:
Hard on? Wank!
Hard ons, the causes of wank.
( ,
Thu 30 Oct 2003, 18:55,
archived)
Hard ons, the causes of wank.
or
"hard on, the cause is of wank"
which sounds better but the grammar's a bit archaic
( ,
Thu 30 Oct 2003, 18:57,
archived)
which sounds better but the grammar's a bit archaic
Or to be more accurate:
hard on, the cause is of wank
and mornings, tv, boredom, squirrels, argos catalogue, that bird who does the weather on itv, april from the teenage mutant hero turtles (cartoon, not the film), arm bands, bus journeys, tv, boredom, squirrels, argos catalogue, that bird who does the weather on itv, april from the teenage mutant hero turtles (cartoon, not the film), arm bands, bus journeys, tv, boredom, squirrels, argos catalogue, that bird who does the weather on itv, april from the teenage mutant hero turtles (cartoon, not the film), arm bands, bus journeys and little alex from playhouse disney.
( ,
Thu 30 Oct 2003, 19:03,
archived)
and mornings, tv, boredom, squirrels, argos catalogue, that bird who does the weather on itv, april from the teenage mutant hero turtles (cartoon, not the film), arm bands, bus journeys, tv, boredom, squirrels, argos catalogue, that bird who does the weather on itv, april from the teenage mutant hero turtles (cartoon, not the film), arm bands, bus journeys, tv, boredom, squirrels, argos catalogue, that bird who does the weather on itv, april from the teenage mutant hero turtles (cartoon, not the film), arm bands, bus journeys and little alex from playhouse disney.
"carved a pumpkin"
first recorded usage in medieval times:
"My liege! Hast thou been carving a pumpkin?"
"By my troth! A pumpkin has been carved across my very threshold! A pox upon you all!"
( ,
Thu 30 Oct 2003, 18:54,
archived)
"My liege! Hast thou been carving a pumpkin?"
"By my troth! A pumpkin has been carved across my very threshold! A pox upon you all!"