Send Us Hatemail ! mailbag@conservativecave.com
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
shadowrider (1000+ posts) Thu Sep-23-10 07:04 PMResponse to Reply #89 101. Once again, SIR, you remind me, SIR, why your use of the word, Sir, as you use it is condescending and arrogant. Speaking down your nose to the great unwashed, you preach as if you are the know all, end all.Examples of leftist violence have been given, you deny them. Present day. Define that. Today? Within the past week?You, SIR, have successfully reminded me why I adjusted my personal setting so as to avoid seeing your posts.Congratulations, SIR, you have done it again.
Printer Friendly | Permalink | Reply | Top The Magistrate (1000+ posts) Fri Sep-24-10 06:07 AMResponse to Reply #101 102. Always Good To Hear From A Satisfied Customer, Sir "Honi soit qui mal pense."
" Profundus Maximus often uses big words, obscure terms and...ahem...even Latin to bluff his way through battle..."
"Honi soit qui mal pense."
"Honi soit qui mal y pense" sometimes rendered as "Honi soit quy mal y pense", "Hony soyt qe mal y pense", "Hony soyt ke mal y pense", "Hony soyt qui mal pence" and various other phoneticizations, is the motto of the English chivalric Order of the Garter. In the French Language it is rendered as "Honni soit qui mal y pense" (the modern conjugation of the verb honnir being honni)[1]. It is also written at the end of the manuscript Sir Gawain and the Green Knight but it appears to have been a later addition.[2] Its literal translation from Old French is "Shame be to him who thinks evil of it",[3] or more strictly: "Let he who thinks ill there be shamed." It is sometimes re-interpreted as "Evil be to him who evil thinks".[4]