NationStates Jolt Archive


Money = ________ As _______ = __________

03-04-2004, 16:44
Money = :D as Communist = The fall of the Human Race.
03-04-2004, 16:45
Money = :( as Scarce= Hens teeth!
03-04-2004, 16:48
Money = :( as Scarce= Hens teeth. That is a lie! He mangled my words! Scarce isn't even a word!
03-04-2004, 16:50
Money = :( as Scarce= Hens teeth. That is a lie! He mangled my words! Scarce isn't even a word!

is too! :P
03-04-2004, 16:50
Money = :( as Scarce= Hens teeth. That is a lie! He mangled my words! Scarce isn't even a word!

is too! :P IS not!
Upper Orwellia
03-04-2004, 16:50
Money is to happiness as bicycle is to fish.
03-04-2004, 16:53
Money is to happiness as bicycle is to fish. No it's Money= :D and Bicycle = Overlord of all fish.
03-04-2004, 17:02
scarce
PRONUNCIATION: AUDIO: skârs KEY
ADJECTIVE: Inflected forms: scarc·er, scarc·est
1. Insufficient to meet a demand or requirement; short in supply: Fresh vegetables were scarce during the drought.
2. Hard to find; absent or rare: Steel pennies are scarce now except in coin shops.
ADVERB: Barely or hardly; scarcely.
IDIOM: make (oneself) scarce Informal 1. To stay away; be absent or elusive.
2. To depart, especially quickly or furtively; abscond.
ETYMOLOGY: Middle English scars, from Old French scars, from Vulgar Latin *excarpsus, narrow, cramped, from past participle of *excarpere, to pluck out, alteration of Latin excerpere, to pick out. See excerpt.
OTHER FORMS: scarceness —NOUN

WORD HISTORY: The words scarce and excerpt illustrate how two words with a common ancestor can diverge from one another in form while passing from one language to another over the centuries. Both words can be traced back to the Latin word excerpere (past participle stem excerpt–), meaning “to pick out,” “to pick out mentally,” and “to select a passage for quotation.” The path is clear and direct from excerpt– to our noun excerpt (first recorded before 1638) and verb (first recorded around 1536), a past participle usage already being recorded in the 15th century. A more tangled path leads to our word scarce. It is assumed that side by side with Latin excerpere existed the Vulgar Latin form *excarpere. *Excarpsus, an adjective formed with the past participle of *excarpere in Vulgar Latin, meant “narrow, cramped,” and from this Vulgar Latin form came the Old French word échars, “insufficient, cramped,” and “stingy.” The Old French word, which existed in a variety of forms, including scars and the chiefly Old North French form escarse, was borrowed into Middle English as scarse, being first recorded in a manuscript written around 1300.
03-04-2004, 17:03
scarce
PRONUNCIATION: AUDIO: skârs KEY
ADJECTIVE: Inflected forms: scarc·er, scarc·est
1. Insufficient to meet a demand or requirement; short in supply: Fresh vegetables were scarce during the drought.
2. Hard to find; absent or rare: Steel pennies are scarce now except in coin shops.
ADVERB: Barely or hardly; scarcely.
IDIOM: make (oneself) scarce Informal 1. To stay away; be absent or elusive.
2. To depart, especially quickly or furtively; abscond.
ETYMOLOGY: Middle English scars, from Old French scars, from Vulgar Latin *excarpsus, narrow, cramped, from past participle of *excarpere, to pluck out, alteration of Latin excerpere, to pick out. See excerpt.
OTHER FORMS: scarceness —NOUN

WORD HISTORY: The words scarce and excerpt illustrate how two words with a common ancestor can diverge from one another in form while passing from one language to another over the centuries. Both words can be traced back to the Latin word excerpere (past participle stem excerpt–), meaning “to pick out,” “to pick out mentally,” and “to select a passage for quotation.” The path is clear and direct from excerpt– to our noun excerpt (first recorded before 1638) and verb (first recorded around 1536), a past participle usage already being recorded in the 15th century. A more tangled path leads to our word scarce. It is assumed that side by side with Latin excerpere existed the Vulgar Latin form *excarpere. *Excarpsus, an adjective formed with the past participle of *excarpere in Vulgar Latin, meant “narrow, cramped,” and from this Vulgar Latin form came the Old French word échars, “insufficient, cramped,” and “stingy.” The Old French word, which existed in a variety of forms, including scars and the chiefly Old North French form escarse, was borrowed into Middle English as scarse, being first recorded in a manuscript written around 1300. Oh SCARCE! I thought it was diffent word cuz I don't see tha word much.
03-04-2004, 17:11
Victory = as satisfying as ... other satisfying stuff
03-04-2004, 17:16
Coke = BEST DRINK EVER! as Canadian beer= s*** in a bottle.
03-04-2004, 17:19
Stella Artois = God of all beers
03-04-2004, 17:33
OMG ITS CHRIS=absolutely correct on the subject of beers

:D
03-04-2004, 19:12
OMG ITS CHRIS=absolutely correct on the subject of beers

:D Albion Soviets = Commie and Commie = Wrong on everything so AS= Wrong on subject of beer.
03-04-2004, 19:14
Your loss mate. *opens a can*