• Follow us on Twitter @buckeyeplanet and @bp_recruiting, like us on Facebook! Enjoy a post or article, recommend it to others! BP is only as strong as its community, and we only promote by word of mouth, so share away!
  • Consider registering! Fewer and higher quality ads, no emails you don't want, access to all the forums, download game torrents, private messages, polls, Sportsbook, etc. Even if you just want to lurk, there are a lot of good reasons to register!
lvbuckeye
Reaction score
9,081

Profile posts Latest activity Postings Achievements About

  • i have no idea actually, lol. i just know it was a bit more than 10k, and it definitely wasn't a nice round number. no worries though, i haven't made a vbet in a pretty long time. thanks!
    Hah! Ignore that PM I sent you. I just figured out what you were responding to - my comment on The Princess Bride. Now I'm intrigued what he sent you. Anything that you could share?
    I think that he's a regional guy for E!Spin, and that he sometimes writes articles for other (non-OSU) sites ... but I'm pretty sure that he's still primarily with Bucknuts.
    fantasy question, if you had favre, mcnabb & romo, but needed a top wr...

    would you deal romo/cribbs for welker/crabtree?

    roster backstory:
    FF advice
    lavar's play was spectacular, but I've seen other players leap over the LOS head-on. I'm not sure I've seen a true leapfrog sack over a tackle ('s back) before :lol:
    hmm... i like etymology. but is it still etymology when it comes to phrases as well? like "raining cats and dogs?" or is that something different?
    What about WTF? :)

    You know Oregon used to send recuits personalized comic books before they got their hand's slapped. Here is Jonathen Stewart's as an example - Oregon's Jonathan Stewart Comic Book - Photos - SI.com

    So Etymology is the study of word origins.

    <DT class=hwrd>Main Entry: <DD class=hwrd>mal- </DD><DT class=func>Function: <DD class=func>combining form </DD><DT class=ety>Etymology: <DD class=ety>Middle English, from Anglo-French, from mal bad (from Latin malus) & mal badly, from Latin male, from malus </DD>and lard

    <DT class=hwrd>Main Entry: <DD class=hwrd><SUP>2</SUP>lard </DD><DT class=func>Function: <DD class=func>noun </DD><DT class=ety>Etymology: <DD class=ety>Middle English, from Anglo-French, from Latin lardum, laridum; perhaps akin to Greek larinos fat </DD><DT class=date>Date: <DD class=date>14th century </DD>: a soft white solid or semisolid fat obtained by rendering fatty pork
  • Loading…
  • Loading…
  • Loading…
  • Loading…
Back
Top