laurie wrote:I actually knew a guy in high school named Philip Robert Monick, AKA Phil R. Monick.
His nickname was Maestro.


So Maestro is his Phil R. monicker, sort of?
laurie wrote:I actually knew a guy in high school named Philip Robert Monick, AKA Phil R. Monick.
His nickname was Maestro.
Grandma had started a diary just before WW 1 and kept it updated through the Nazi occupation.Algot Runeman wrote:holograph
Grandpa was innately easy-going and even-tempered. Except when he attended a Holland-Belgium soccer match. Then he was a firebrand supporter, apparently having four hands to rattle his rattle, blow his horn, wave his home team's flag and hold his ice lolly, all at the same time.Algot Runeman wrote:phlegmatic
adjective
(of a person) having an unemotional and stolidly calm disposition.
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Phlegmatic actually describes baseball players ...
If you keep looking at this picture long enough, you'll see the silhouette of one of my grandma's boots. But be patient, it may take a while.Algot Runeman wrote:megalopolis
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The city lights shine bright at night.
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It's not the naturists who prefer insolation in isolation. It's the non-naturists who insist on it.Algot Runeman wrote:insolation
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Algot Runeman wrote:cutlass
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E.P.S. wrote:I don't know if Tommy Cooper ever cut a lass with a cutlass.
But if he did try, I'm sure it must have failed.
Whereupon he must have cut his loss.
Aspic depends on gelation. Aspic (in its French meaning) is a reversible hydrocolloid, meaning that upon heating it liquefies and upon cooling it gelifies (solidifies), both of which can be done repeatedly.Algot Runeman wrote:gelation
My grandma was not particularly vengeful or violent. And she did not believe in magic or voodoo or whatever.Algot Runeman wrote:direful
Watch the sparky parky. If he wears a snarky parka, it's parky.Algot Runeman wrote:parky
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It was parky at the beach, but it didn't keep people away.
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