| bio | website | gplus.to/mbx |
|---|---|---|
| location | Germany | |
| age | 33 | |
| visits | member for | 2 years, 1 month |
| seen | May 4 at 0:18 | |
| stats | profile views | 43 |
|
Nov 11 |
awarded | Famous Question |
|
Jul 31 |
awarded | Caucus |
|
Apr 2 |
awarded | Yearling |
|
Jan 23 |
awarded | Notable Question |
|
Nov 10 |
awarded | Commentator |
|
Nov 10 |
comment |
What is a collective term for castles, citadels, forts, palaces etc.? would you take e.g. cathedrals into account (or other possibly all religoius, aristocratic and military monuments)? |
|
Oct 26 |
comment |
Is “man with the monocle” an established idiom or just a figurative expression? Sounds more like Col. Klink to me |
|
Sep 9 |
awarded | Fanatic |
|
Sep 1 |
revised |
What is the origin of “your mother” as an answer to any question? +link to serverfault |
|
Aug 22 |
awarded | Popular Question |
|
Jul 27 |
comment |
Can the word “special” have a negative connotation? "Well, yes, I am a mom. My kids are very special. So special, they go to special classes." GTA-VC |
|
Jul 20 |
revised |
What is the origin of “your mother” as an answer to any question? added 110 characters in body |
|
Jul 8 |
awarded | Autobiographer |
|
Jul 1 |
awarded | Enthusiast |
|
Jun 2 |
comment |
What is the origin of “your mother” as an answer to any question? @Brian Could you spell the Russian phrase? In fact, the use of "yo moma" or "deine mudda" might be derived from the vulgar version and lost that context somehow. |
|
May 31 |
comment |
What is the origin of “your mother” as an answer to any question? @Brian Hopper I don't think so since it seems to be used even without the sexual context. As I described it can be used as answer to anything - just like 42 or meh. |
|
May 28 |
accepted | What is the origin of “your mother” as an answer to any question? |
|
May 25 |
comment |
A word to describe “people I care about” my crew sounds hierarchical wether our crew should fit |
|
May 24 |
revised |
What is the origin of “your mother” as an answer to any question? delete /insulting/ as these answers are more annoying than unsulting |
|
May 22 |
revised |
What is the origin of “your mother” as an answer to any question? given another example for the context |