johnyrotten Posted Sunday at 11:29 AM Posted Sunday at 11:29 AM "Words are hard" is a phrase I've used poking fun at someone.
Ace-Garageguy Posted Sunday at 01:41 PM Posted Sunday at 01:41 PM Someone once said "you can't learn how to drive in a parked car".
NOBLNG Posted Sunday at 01:44 PM Author Posted Sunday at 01:44 PM Car models get far more attention on this forum than trucks.😕
bobthehobbyguy Posted Sunday at 02:25 PM Posted Sunday at 02:25 PM Trucks are used to get your models to your workbench.
NOBLNG Posted Monday at 03:24 AM Author Posted Monday at 03:24 AM “Workbench” can mean anything from a desk, to a table, to an old door on a couple of sawhorses.
Ace-Garageguy Posted Monday at 06:15 AM Posted Monday at 06:15 AM "Sawhorses" was what little Johnny answered when he was asked what he'd seen at the Equine Museum. 1
thatz4u Posted Monday at 09:53 PM Posted Monday at 09:53 PM Museum is were King Tut now resides according to Steve Martin in this 1978 video performed live onstage in New York City.
Ace-Garageguy Posted Monday at 10:17 PM Posted Monday at 10:17 PM "City girls just seem to find out early how to open doors with just a smile"
JollySipper Posted Monday at 11:16 PM Posted Monday at 11:16 PM (edited) "Smile!" isn't the best way to get a kid grinning for a picture; it's better to say something like "Mommy tooted!" which always gets a chuckle........ (I stumped the game..... sorry!) Edited Tuesday at 08:07 PM by JollySipper 2
NOBLNG Posted Tuesday at 09:50 PM Author Posted Tuesday at 09:50 PM Chuckle if you like, but it takes more than that to really get us stumped. 1
Ace-Garageguy Posted Tuesday at 10:16 PM Posted Tuesday at 10:16 PM (edited) "Stumped and tooted and bears, oh my" was what the nonsense-spouting AI came up with for the next post. Edited Tuesday at 10:17 PM by Ace-Garageguy punctiliousness 1
NOBLNG Posted Wednesday at 02:49 PM Author Posted Wednesday at 02:49 PM (edited) Post up the next reply if you are not too afraid to even try, by starting a sentence with kakorrhaphiophobia. Edited Wednesday at 02:52 PM by NOBLNG
Ace-Garageguy Posted Wednesday at 04:09 PM Posted Wednesday at 04:09 PM (edited) "Kakorrhaphiophobia" is obviously the fear of kakorrhaphios, either singly or in groups. Edited Wednesday at 04:10 PM by Ace-Garageguy
thatz4u Posted Wednesday at 08:57 PM Posted Wednesday at 08:57 PM Groups in the 1960's made great music, here is an example.
Ace-Garageguy Posted yesterday at 12:00 AM Posted yesterday at 12:00 AM It still surprises me, though not so much as it used to, that so many tough-talkers go to water when the stuff hits the fan.
NOBLNG Posted 21 hours ago Author Posted 21 hours ago Fan belts in model car kits are always way too thick.
Ace-Garageguy Posted 21 hours ago Posted 21 hours ago "Thick as a brick" is a Briticism meaning "dumb as a rock".
thatz4u Posted 14 hours ago Posted 14 hours ago Rock & Roll Music, in a concert in Germany around the mid 1960's, recorded live.
Ace-Garageguy Posted 12 hours ago Posted 12 hours ago (edited) "Live" is the last word of the non-sentence immediately above, which could have very easily been a sentence if the last 3 words had been "was recorded live". Edited 12 hours ago by Ace-Garageguy
mk11 Posted 12 hours ago Posted 12 hours ago Live every moment, take chances and don't wait, because right now you are the oldest you've ever been and the youngest you'll ever be again. 1
Ace-Garageguy Posted 12 hours ago Posted 12 hours ago Again, a snippet of wisdom surfaces from the morass.
mk11 Posted 12 hours ago Posted 12 hours ago Morass is a term used to describe smothering uniformity and things that drag us down; rise above this by choosing to replenish your thoughts from quality sources.
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