- Sep 27, 2005
- 4,676
- 5,582
pardon?
pardon?
JJ still confident of striker it seems
Yeah that's the 1 he's stitched me up hahaView attachment 62392
JJ still confident of striker it seems
As a second hint in a short space, I'd remove that - no twitter or images allowed
I think JJ's tweets are normally fine, would have been better pasted as text though.
NO TWITTER from ANYONE under any circumstances in the Daily ITK Discussion Thread.
Up to the poster to risk it, but the rules says
So no room for error
Yeah that's the 1 he's stitched me up haha
Are you fuckheads seriously going to get this shit locked with a debate about the rules
Christ alive
A type of soil is clay.
And -ton as a suffix can be indicative of a small town, settlement, village or farm, which is also what a hamlet is.
That gives us Clayton.
And, of the many Claytons out there playing football, I note one Clayton da Silva, with silver here representing treasure or reward.
Unfortunately, I don't think we're likely to be in for a winger from the Brazilian league, so I tried again.
Another synonym of soil is marl. It's a kind of lime-rich mud, but you knew that.
'Upon' is 'on'.
And Hamlet was a King (or rather Hamlet's dad, who was also called Hamlet, was a king).
Which gives us...
Marlon King.
Hmm. Back to the drawing board, methinks...
Sloppy work, NineA type of soil is clay.
And -ton as a suffix can be indicative of a small town, settlement, village or farm, which is also what a hamlet is.
That gives us Clayton.
And, of the many Claytons out there playing football, I note one Clayton da Silva, with silver here representing treasure or reward.
Unfortunately, I don't think we're likely to be in for a winger from the Brazilian league, so I tried again.
Another synonym of soil is marl. It's a kind of lime-rich mud, but you knew that.
'Upon' is 'on'.
And Hamlet was a King (or rather Hamlet's dad, who was also called Hamlet, was a king).
Which gives us...
Marlon King.
Hmm. Back to the drawing board, methinks...
A type of soil is clay.
And -ton as a suffix can be indicative of a small town, settlement, village or farm, which is also what a hamlet is.
That gives us Clayton.
And, of the many Claytons out there playing football, I note one Clayton da Silva, with silver here representing treasure or reward.
Unfortunately, I don't think we're likely to be in for a winger from the Brazilian league, so I tried again.
Another synonym of soil is marl. It's a kind of lime-rich mud, but you knew that.
'Upon' is 'on'.
And Hamlet was a King (or rather Hamlet's dad, who was also called Hamlet, was a king).
Which gives us...
Marlon King.
Hmm. Back to the drawing board, methinks...