A thumb!?
(coughs)
a Ah, well yes. A thumb, certainly. Why not.
A thumb!?
(coughs)
a Ah, well yes. A thumb, certainly. Why not.
Well the chocolates see to think so.
Doesn’t mean the fairytale Lucifer couldn’t or wouldn’t speak the truth, Christians just gaslit themselves into believing that he couldn’t and wouldn’t.
Less cheese = fewer holes Fewer holes = more cheese Less cheese = more cheese
less cheese = more cheese = less cheese = more cheese → ∞: infinite cheese glitch
The unusual name of the hamlet dates back at least 1,000 years to Anglo-Saxon times. It was recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086 as Scatera or Scetra, a Norman French rendering of an Old English name derived from the word scite, meaning dung. This word became schitte in Middle English and shit in modern English.[4] The name alludes to the stream that bisects the hamlet, which appears to have been called the Shiter or Shitter, or “brook used as a privy”.[5] The place-name therefore means something along the lines of “farmstead on the stream used as an open sewer”.
Bonus:
The place-name Penistone is first attested in the Domesday Book of 1086, where it appears as Pengeston(e) and Pangeston; later sources record it as Peningston.[2] It may mean “the farmstead at the hill called Penning”, in reference to the high ridge immediately south of the town. This combines the Brittonic word penn (meaning a head, end, or height) with the Old English suffix ing and the word tun (meaning a farmstead or village).[3]
Penistone has frequently been noted on lists of unusual place-names because it contains the letter sequence “penis”;[4][5] however, those initial five letters are not pronounced like the name of the body part.
The big one might get hungry, but I don’t think it can take on the fat one.