Not exactly related, bit it reminded me of this article called Regrets of an Accomplished Child. http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/04/educa ... share&_r=0Portia wrote:Well, I do get to perpetuate the system and groom up-and-coming high school juniors to take a meaningless, narrow exam, for fun and profit! So they too can forget to go click a virtual box a few weeks too late.Emiliana wrote:I ask myself this question on almost a daily basis.Portia wrote:Where's your 99th percentile on standardized testing get you now?!
(It's the ciiiiircle of liiiife...)
Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
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thatonemom
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Re: Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
Re: Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
It's okay. You're from Canada.Zedability wrote:*facepalm*...Portia wrote:http://theboard.byu.edu/questions/70035/
That is, of course, east of campus. Mountains=east.
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Zedability
- Posts: 987
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Re: Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
I'm pretty sure we still have cardinal directions in Canada. But that actually is probably why; where I'm from, the mountains are west.Defy V wrote:It's okay. You're from Canada.Zedability wrote:*facepalm*...Portia wrote:http://theboard.byu.edu/questions/70035/
That is, of course, east of campus. Mountains=east.
Re: Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
Hey, if you go far enough north, it's all south.Zedability wrote:I'm pretty sure we still have cardinal directions in Canada.
Re: Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
Maybe, just maybe, there is a better way to define yourself than by standardized testing percentiles.Portia wrote:Where's your 99th percentile on standardized testing get you now?!
Re: Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
Join a High IQ Society!Katya wrote:Maybe, just maybe, there is a better way to define yourself than by standardized testing percentiles.Portia wrote:Where's your 99th percentile on standardized testing get you now?!
Quod gratis asseritur, gratis negatur.
Re: Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
Katya wrote:Maybe, just maybe, there is a better way to define yourself than by standardized testing percentiles.Portia wrote:Where's your 99th percentile on standardized testing get you now?!
I wish the Texas State legislature agreed with you.
beautiful, dirty, rich
Re: Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
Emergency! My aunt invited people over for me to hang out with tonight, bless her heart. But I don't know them and I am bad at social situations to start with and my aunt just left so she isn't around to defuse the situation...or see my embarassment, I guess.
It is not an emergency any of you can help with, since whatever happens will happen. It is just an emergency of my heart.
It is not an emergency any of you can help with, since whatever happens will happen. It is just an emergency of my heart.
Re: Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
also this is a note to self to split thebtopic when i have a real computer. so, tonorrow.
we are not allowed to have too many on topoc posts in a rowbyou guys.
/kindle typing without editing
we are not allowed to have too many on topoc posts in a rowbyou guys.
/kindle typing without editing
- bobtheenchantedone
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Re: Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
And then sometimes I have to put my earphones in and play music really loudly so I don't have to listen to someone on the next computer playing a dramatic story about people dying. There's a reason why I always leave the room/close the door when you're watching crime shows, Marduk's mom!
The Epistler was quite honestly knocked on her ethereal behind by the sheer logic of this.
- Giovanni Schwartz
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Re: Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
The awesome moment when you've finished all your work for the day, so you spend your last hour getting paid to watch Arrested Development.
- Giovanni Schwartz
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Re: Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
Story time:
My companion and I were doing our English tracting. Meaning, we wandered around and put tracts for the free English classes in mailboxes. As we were going down a street putting tracts in boxes, we saw a small apartment complex with a superintendent (kind of. A “guanliyuan”) out in the office guarding the gate to get in.
There were some guanliyuans who would let us put the flyers in the mailboxes of their apartment complexes (or dalous) if you asked, or at least let you put a stack of them out on the counter for residents to grab if they were interested.
So we pull up at this dalou, and since I was new, I just start putting these little flyers in the mailboxes. My companion starts on the other side. After we get probably 15 of the 30 done, the guanliyuan notices us and starts signaling at us to stop. My companion starts explaining to him what we’re doing, but then the guy starts trying to sign to us, as if he’s deaf.
Granted, we both started to trust him about it because he wouldn’t talk. But we’re still a little wary. He walks out of his little office and grabs all the English tracts out of the mailboxes and throwing them at us and on the ground. My companion starts to get defensive and picks them up. The man kind of ignores him, but waves and points at his own ears every time my companion talks.
My companion was standing directly behind him.
At about this point, the guanliyuan’s friend shows up and starts calling his name. The guanliyuan turns around to look at the guy, and talks to him. Mr. Guanliyuan waves frantically at him to get him to stop talking. Mr. Friend says “Why are you acting so weird? What’s wrong?” Mr. Guanliyuan mumbles “Later.” Or some equivalent to his friend. His friend gets all confused and is like “umm… okay? Weirdo.”
We walk away as Mr. Friend walks into Mr. Guanliyuan’s office. We get on our bikes and ride away to the sounds of two friends laughing together and chatting from the building behind us.
Many confused looks were exchanged that day.
My companion and I were doing our English tracting. Meaning, we wandered around and put tracts for the free English classes in mailboxes. As we were going down a street putting tracts in boxes, we saw a small apartment complex with a superintendent (kind of. A “guanliyuan”) out in the office guarding the gate to get in.
There were some guanliyuans who would let us put the flyers in the mailboxes of their apartment complexes (or dalous) if you asked, or at least let you put a stack of them out on the counter for residents to grab if they were interested.
So we pull up at this dalou, and since I was new, I just start putting these little flyers in the mailboxes. My companion starts on the other side. After we get probably 15 of the 30 done, the guanliyuan notices us and starts signaling at us to stop. My companion starts explaining to him what we’re doing, but then the guy starts trying to sign to us, as if he’s deaf.
Granted, we both started to trust him about it because he wouldn’t talk. But we’re still a little wary. He walks out of his little office and grabs all the English tracts out of the mailboxes and throwing them at us and on the ground. My companion starts to get defensive and picks them up. The man kind of ignores him, but waves and points at his own ears every time my companion talks.
My companion was standing directly behind him.
At about this point, the guanliyuan’s friend shows up and starts calling his name. The guanliyuan turns around to look at the guy, and talks to him. Mr. Guanliyuan waves frantically at him to get him to stop talking. Mr. Friend says “Why are you acting so weird? What’s wrong?” Mr. Guanliyuan mumbles “Later.” Or some equivalent to his friend. His friend gets all confused and is like “umm… okay? Weirdo.”
We walk away as Mr. Friend walks into Mr. Guanliyuan’s office. We get on our bikes and ride away to the sounds of two friends laughing together and chatting from the building behind us.
Many confused looks were exchanged that day.
Re: Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
Is there ever a non-latin phrase use of the word "quo" that isn't preceded by "status?"
Deus ab veritas
Re: Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
'Status' comes from Latin, too, though.
Re: Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
Edit: Reading comp fail.Marduk wrote:Is there ever a non-latin phrase use of the word "quo" that isn't preceded by "status?"
Last edited by wired on Thu Dec 06, 2012 6:57 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- Giovanni Schwartz
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- Joined: Wed Mar 19, 2008 9:41 pm
Re: Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
"This quote has the word 'quo' in it."
Re: Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
Comes from, but isn't.mic0 wrote:'Status' comes from Latin, too, though.
Deus ab veritas
Re: Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
This is the best the OED can do:Marduk wrote:Is there ever a non-latin phrase use of the word "quo" that isn't preceded by "status?"
And I'm actually going to say that doesn't count, because it's just idiom-breaking of quid pro quo. What prompts the question?quo, n. - In conjunction with quid: an action performed or thing given in return for something else, or in expectation of some return. Cf. quid pro quo phr. 2.
1939 S. de Madariaga Christopher Columbus xii. 136 The contractual sense, that attitude which sees every event of life as a transaction and expects and demands a definite quid for every quo.
2007 Herald (Glasgow) (Nexis) 17 Apr. 12 According to protesters, the prospect of a student village in the neighbourhood of Glasgow's biggest university is not enough of a quid to go with the quo.
Re: Happy Days in Random Chatter 10
My word processor told me that "quo" wasn't a word. I was like "is so! Like, the status quo! Or....or......"
Deus ab veritas