|
Post by Major Hathaway on Jun 15, 2005 12:03:26 GMT -5
vote away
|
|
|
Post by trisha on Jun 15, 2005 19:12:54 GMT -5
WHAT?!! Not to challenge your supreme authority and good taste, Major, but how come Metella's "he eats them" didn't make it? It was by far the funniest, IMO.
|
|
|
Post by Metella on Jun 16, 2005 7:11:27 GMT -5
ha ha ha I have a WRITE IN VOTE ha ha ha ha
|
|
|
Post by Major Hathaway on Jun 16, 2005 8:22:59 GMT -5
ok - if we get one more write in vote I will put it in
since bugger references abounded on this one, i culled the field to some who had not submitted in a while, but if you want more BUGGERS you can have more buggers!
|
|
|
Post by Sirenna on Jun 17, 2005 20:05:25 GMT -5
?!!
What did I miss? I'm off to read the caption thread...
|
|
|
Post by NicoleMarie on Jun 22, 2005 19:21:51 GMT -5
I want buggers! hehehehe!
Personally, I liked mine, "Goren's being allergic to Bishop"! I'm so vain! hehehe!
|
|
amnesic
Silver Shield Investigator
Posts: 66
|
Post by amnesic on Jun 26, 2005 9:52:19 GMT -5
have is missed something? is a bugger (or is it booger?) the US version of a bogie? because a bugger is something compeltely different here in the UK!
|
|
|
Post by domenicaflor on Jun 26, 2005 11:01:01 GMT -5
Amnesiac,
A "booger" in US is a slang term for nasal mucus, a.k.a. "snot". I guess some folks here also spell it "bugger".
Definitely not the same as "bugger" in UK.
I don't know what a "bogie" is in UK. I only know "bogie" in reference to golf or "Bogie and Bacall".
D.
|
|
amnesic
Silver Shield Investigator
Posts: 66
|
Post by amnesic on Jun 29, 2005 12:13:03 GMT -5
a bogie/bogies in the UK is a booger
|
|
|
Post by urufu on Dec 23, 2005 14:06:11 GMT -5
this is wierd i can't see the pictures or the captions
|
|
|
Post by trisha on Dec 23, 2005 15:15:51 GMT -5
They're on the thread "Happy Family Caption"
|
|