Countdown

Started by yerssot59 pages

not necessarily true

It probably is for most, but for the sake of not committing a sweeping generization....yerssot is right

some people will go for the love story

But most for the action.

I believe that will be a nice addition, but the fights scenes look awesome...at least from the trailers.

52 days!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 🙂

we are getting there!

**** With apologies to shakespeare *****

" A yerssot by any other name, would NOT still be a yerssot ! "

🙂

yeah,

Thou are special, Thou are Yerssot 😄

What play is that from???

"The fabulous, incredable, wonderfull, allmighty, cheering, great, cool, wacko, talented mister Yerssot"

🙄 I was refering to Master Harmax's borrowed and slightly altered quote......

But thanks for the interesting, if not humble...title for a play 😉

argh! don't tell me you don't know from what quote that one is adapted!!!

Romeo and Juliet!

A rose by any other name...

I read Romeo and Juliet a few years ago and I only saw the movie once before that....and yes I'm telling you I didn't know which play that was from 🙂

even I, who hasn't read Shakespear knows this one!

Well u know i can't agree with shakespeare that a rose by any other name would still be a rose. For instance, if u called a rose a "mud", i bet it wouldn't smell as good as if it was called a rose.
I mean say I said " Here's a big red rose for u Julie ", i guess u'd like that ... and you would look something like 🙂

but if i was to say " Here's a big red MUD for u Julie ", then i guess u'd look something like 😠

So u see ... shakespeare wasn't always right .... !!

51 !!!

I'd have to assume thst you would pick the "rose"...and then I'd look like 🙂

Yes, Shakespear wasn't always right, but he did write some very nice plays 😉

Yerssot, you've never read Shakespeare????? 😱

Guess that's all for now 😉

Yerssot has never read ... period. 😄

yeah, it makes my eyes move 🙁

but if you call a rose mud and mud a rose, you know that it was originally a rose

'Let Rome in Tiber melt
and the Wide Arch of the Empire Fall
This is my space'

- Marcus, in the play "Cleopatra"