mattd2 said:Oh no, not this again :smack:
GrogNerd said:Howdy is a beagle. purebred, but no papers. rescued almost 3 years ago and he will be 5 at the end of February
got his name from the freckles on his nose. we thought he looked like Howdy Doody
I heard this dumb 13 year old girl saying beer kills brain cells, makes you gain weight, and destroys your liver.
Was like.. bitch I ain't that fat.. YET.
A girl about the same age said "alcohol destroys lives" and got an approving nod from her grandmother. I didn't know what to say. Some battles are not worth fighting. It does irk me that people raise children to be afraid of everything, and cast blanket judgements.
Grog, what a cool looking dog in your picture, what breed? The pic is very small in my app, beagle or basset or something I am guessing
Fizzycist said:A+ on that topic redirect.
I heard a radio ad today for a recently opened brew pub. They compared their "freshest beer in Idaho" to the ever popular BMC. I just wonder why they would bother. BMC drinkers won't change based on a radio ad from some "froofy $4 a pint place! 'Merica!", and craft drinkers will assume either they don't know beer well enough to make anything good, or recognize it's a full-of-crap marketing technique and avoid the place out of spite.
Most likely the book wasn't published anywhere near that time, and I am also pretty sure if it was, the book has had an update and/or revision since that time(the early 1900s?). So no it's still wrong. This is supposed to be researched and scholarly work and that definition isn't near current or correct. So yes it IS funny. Don't let him knock you, some people like to pull this type of stuff, drawing on antiquated material from beer history, to sound like they know something, and make these ridiculous types of corrections. Makes them feel smart or something. "Well actually it used to be blah blah," Well it ISN'T now so no still wrong. We had a few throw downs in this thread over this type of thing already... I remember a nightmare of something about an archaichly phrased book??
Right from my microbiology book:
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I'd say "ale-y" is all the flavors that we associate with ales that are not associated with most lagers. So, big malt character and/or heavy use of hops, lots of yeast character, thick mouthfeel.
Cream ale is probably one of the best bets for an american lager drinker, so it sounds like you rather understood it too![]()
Zythophile said:What exactly is your problem? The piece says, accurately, what "ale" used to mean. It then goes into how the meaning of "ale" has changed over the centuries. Nowhere does it say that the current usage for the word "ale" is wrong. Nor is it trying to "correct" anything.
Bierliebhaber said:IMHO, the current meaning of "Well, actually.." should become the archaic meaning. And hence forth "Well, actually..." and its variants should be understood as an abbreviated way to say, "Quick! Kick me in the balls before I finish the rest of this sentence!".
iambeer said:I heard this dumb 13 year old girl saying beer kills brain cells, makes you gain weight, and destroys your liver.
Was like.. bitch I ain't that fat.. YET.
And hence forth "Well, actually..." and its variants should be understood as an abbreviated way to say, "Quick! Kick me in the balls before I finish the rest of this sentence!"
Haha sound advice, and I would not say all "well actually" users are dbags. I have seen you around the forum and seen you use it, and you never came off as an ******* to me lol. But many people who use "well actually" are trying to be, as you so eloquently put it "nazi grammar trolls"
Doesn't seem like something I want to try and picture haha.
Hahha good point seeing as "Well actually..." Is more often than not followed by some random fact that doesn't even apply that someone pulls out of left field just to sound like they are just overflowingly full of knowledge
Example: hey dude you spelled hopps wrong
"We'll actually originally a tribe in papa new gunie discovered hops in the early 1500s and spelled then as Hopps with two Ps which we later found documented on the Mayan calendar. So technically he didn't spell hops wrong he we referring to the ancient spelling"
I see how this could easily be resolved with a swift kick in the nards
Well, actually, I think the correct term is 'nads.
I also just dislocated my knee trying to kick my self in the "nads" for posting this.
Well actually... 'nads is the short form of gonads, the organs responsible for gamete production.
gonad (n.) 1880, from Modern Latin gonas (plural gonades), coined from Greek gone, gonos "seed, act of generation, race, family," from gignesthai "be born," related to genos "race, birth, descent" (see genus). Related: gonads.
Well actually... I'm just being a d!ck.
Well actually the correct term is "Richard"
OT, but have you ever seen someone actually do that? (Kick themselves in the nads, that is)Well, actually, I think the correct term is 'nads.
I also just dislocated my knee trying to kick my self in the "nads" for posting this.