"You try to be enthusiastic, but in vain..." - Boredom in lectures
"You have no X" - Disparaging statement where X can be anything intangible (e.g. "You have no talent" or "You have no excitement")
"You're giving me X" - Where X is an emotion, such as "You're giving me annoyed" (in other words, you're annoying me) or "You're giving me bored" or something
"Hey, X! After all... I want Y!" - X is a name, and Y is something. Works best if Y is one word.
"Supply to demand to nantoka!" - An exclamation I made during a Business Environment lecture after getting yet ANOTHER sheet on supply and demand curves. "To" (pronounced "toh", not "too") is Japanese for "and", and the phrase roughly means "Supply and demand and whatever!" Since then it's been kind of a memetic phrase for me relating to Business Environment and my hatred for it in general. For best results it should be pronounced entirely in a Japanese way, i.e. "Sapurai to demando to nantoka!"







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Current Favorite Song: Fer Sure by The Medic Droid
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If I say "Darn you!" IRL or online, it doesn't mean I'm trying to insult you. It means I'm genuinely amazed and impressed by your abilities or talents.
~Melchony is the light and love of my life. ^_^
~NCPanthersgurl
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Sub-Zero Wins
Flawless victory
Fatailty
--
If I say "Darn you!" IRL or online, it doesn't mean I'm trying to insult you. It means I'm genuinely amazed and impressed by your abilities or talents.
~Melchony is the light and love of my life. ^_^
--
Sub-Zero Wins
Flawless victory
Fatailty
--
If I say "Darn you!" IRL or online, it doesn't mean I'm trying to insult you. It means I'm genuinely amazed and impressed by your abilities or talents.
~Melchony is the light and love of my life. ^_^
--
Sub-Zero Wins
Flawless victory
Fatailty
Its inome :'D
--
If I say "Darn you!" IRL or online, it doesn't mean I'm trying to insult you. It means I'm genuinely amazed and impressed by your abilities or talents.
~Melchony is the light and love of my life. ^_^
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