My MTG nerd compels me to mention that an indestructible creature will go to the graveyard when it has negative toughness because negative toughness is not a "destroy" condition; also, regeneration doesn't apply to exiled (removed from game) creatures so it doesn't need to be mentioned.
My MTG nerd compels me to mention that an indestructible creature will go to the graveyard when it has negative toughness because negative toughness is not a "destroy" condition; also, regeneration doesn't apply to exiled (removed from game) creatures so it doesn't need to be mentioned.
There, I feel better now.
I'm so glad I'm not the only one who thought of all that. XD
@Jenzafar , that's the most creative meme I've seen in a long time! Also, kudos for knowing how to conjugate the verb "to have" in Elizabethan English.
"I have, thou hast, he hath, we have, ye have, they have."
People who incorrectly try to use Elizabethan or Shakespearean English in memes or other fantasy related activities, such as writing fan fiction, or Renaissance reenactment, (I'm looking at *you*, Dynaheir's writers), are one of my pet peeves.
I don't say it much, because most internet posters don't take kindly to having it pointed out. In fact, on one of the first pages of this very thread's previous version, I stand accused of giving Spiderman cancer, because I pointed out that somebody tried to make a meme using Elizabethan English without bothering to learn the conjugations of verbs and declensions of pronouns.
@Jenzafar , that's the most creative meme I've seen in a long time! Also, kudos for knowing how to conjugate the verb "to have" in Elizabethan English.
"I have, thou hast, he hath, we have, ye have, they have."
People who try to use Elizabethan or Shakespearean English in memes or other fantasy related activities, such as writing fan fiction, or Rennaisance reenactment, (I'm looking at *you*, Dynaheir's writers), are one of my pet peeves.
I don't say it much, because most internet posters don't take kindly to having it pointed out. In fact, on one of the first pages of this very thread's previous version, I stand accused of giving Spiderman cancer, because I pointed out that somebody tried to make a meme using Elizabethan English without bothering to learn the conjugations of verbs and declensions of pronouns.
@Anduin, LOL. But, It looks to me like those hamsters are that girl's pets, and that she is experiencing the warm cuddliness that is the favor of Boo.
You made it as a glass half empty, I see a glass half full. Toh-MAY-toes, toh-MAH-toes. Although, I guess if you had made the picture a bit more forcefully to your "pessimistic" interpretation, it would have been too gruesome to be funny.
Comments
fixed.
[spoiler=Spoiler for Firefly and Serenity]
By lydia414
[/spoiler]
By quietlynonlinear
By Jeremy Kaye
By Geekify Inc.
http://imgur.com/gallery/zM4qd
http://imgur.com/gallery/hP85P
http://imgur.com/a/wkQrb?gallery
http://imgur.com/gallery/ao3zc
http://i.imgur.com/yRbUxHI.jpg
There, I feel better now.
"I have, thou hast, he hath, we have, ye have, they have."
People who incorrectly try to use Elizabethan or Shakespearean English in memes or other fantasy related activities, such as writing fan fiction, or Renaissance reenactment, (I'm looking at *you*, Dynaheir's writers), are one of my pet peeves.
I don't say it much, because most internet posters don't take kindly to having it pointed out. In fact, on one of the first pages of this very thread's previous version, I stand accused of giving Spiderman cancer, because I pointed out that somebody tried to make a meme using Elizabethan English without bothering to learn the conjugations of verbs and declensions of pronouns.
So, thanks for getting it right in yours.
http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/YeOldeButcheredeEnglishe
You made it as a glass half empty, I see a glass half full. Toh-MAY-toes, toh-MAH-toes. Although, I guess if you had made the picture a bit more forcefully to your "pessimistic" interpretation, it would have been too gruesome to be funny.