Nationwider Posted 23 October 2006 Posted 23 October 2006 What's the deal? How much are you making on the click-thru's and can we all have a cut? 50/50 between you and the mods and we won't delete it??? * * I wouldn't really promote such flagrant blackmailing, of course. davieG or Fezz might, but I wouldn't.
cisono Posted 23 October 2006 Posted 23 October 2006 or.... Hmmm after long deliberation, I have decided that you may be right there
Collymore Posted 23 October 2006 Posted 23 October 2006 Hmmm after long deliberations, I have decided that you may be right there Unless the world blows up on thursday... But would there still be a friday if no calendars or humans are there to experience it? We only say Friday is a Friday cos some person said it was at some point... what must have happened is, some guy must of thought "right, today is a monday, i'll make tomorrow tuesday and so on...." but what if it was actually a Friday he was on when he decided it was a monday??? that would make Monday a Friday and the actual friday of today a tuesday??
Rincewind Posted 23 October 2006 Posted 23 October 2006 Friday From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation, search This article is about the day of the week. For other uses, see Friday (disambiguation). The goddess Freyja, after whom Friday is named.Friday (pron. IPA: [fɹaɪ.deɪ] or [fɹaɪ.di]) is the fifth day of the week, falling between Thursday and Saturday. In countries that adopt a Sunday-first convention, it is commonly considered the sixth day of the week (see Days of the week for more on the different conventions.) The name Friday comes from the Old English frigedæg, meaning the day of Frige the Anglo-Saxon form of Frigga, the Germanic goddess of beauty. In most Germanic languages it is named after Freyja (Freitag in Modern German, vrijdag in Dutch, fredag in Swedish, Norwegian, Danish etc.), but Freyja and Frigga are frequently identified with each other. The word for Friday in most Romance languages is derived from the name of Venus (vendredi in French, venerdi in Italian, viernes in Spanish, vineri in Romanian etc.) In India, Friday is Shukravar. It is based on Shukraâ€â€Vedic god of Venus. In Japan, Friday is Kin-Yoobi: "Gold day" or "money day", and in many asian cultures, paydays are on fridays. In most countries with a five-day work week, Friday is the last workday before the weekend and is therefore viewed as a cause for celebration or relief. In some offices, employees are allowed to wear less formal attire on Fridays, known as Casual Friday or Dress-Down Friday.
Alexikokopops Posted 24 October 2006 Posted 24 October 2006 Positive EV lads, how can you afford NOT to buy a ticket?!
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