- 20 Sep 11, 18:40#276132
More poignant than funny. Ayrton and Bruno.


" Fire! Fire!, Diniz in the oven" - Murray Walker on seeing Pedro Diniz's Sauber on fire
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^^ can anyone ID what he's drinking? One of the words likely says Arctica.
Sweet Jesus, what is happening in Red Bull?!
^ Brilliant!
I don't know why I haven't clocked this before, but those angels in your sig have really big bums. Maybe it's just an awkward angle?
^ Brilliant!
I don't know why I haven't clocked this before, but those angels in your sig have really big bums. Maybe it's just an awkward angle?
Nah, I had to digitally squish them to make them fit with our 100 pixel limit for pics
^ Brilliant!
I don't know why I haven't clocked this before, but those angels in your sig have really big bums. Maybe it's just an awkward angle?
Nah, I had to digitally squish them to make them fit with our 100 pixel limit for pics
Mmmmm..... digitally squeezed bums.
So according to your billboard, do atheists lack a duck?
^ Brilliant!
I don't know why I haven't clocked this before, but those angels in your sig have really big bums. Maybe it's just an awkward angle?
Nah, I had to digitally squish them to make them fit with our 100 pixel limit for pics
Mmmmm..... digitally squeezed bums.
So according to your billboard, do atheists lack a duck?
It's a logical fallacy to assume that atheism is only for card-carrying vaginists.
The point made in the billboard is a simile:
Even though both similes and metaphors are forms of comparison, similes indirectly compare the two ideas and allow them to remain distinct in spite of their similarities, whereas metaphors compare two things directly. For instance, a simile that compares a person with a bullet would go as follows: "Chris was a record-setting runner as fast as a speeding bullet." A metaphor might read something like, "When Chris ran, he was a speeding bullet racing along the track."
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