Comic Discussion > QUESTIONABLE CONTENT

WCDT: 17-21 January 2011 (1841-45)

<< < (41/78) > >>

pendrake:
for comic 1844..

1. Upon reflection of the comic strip title after reading, I give an eye-roll groan at the overall Harry Potter gag :roll: .

2. Jeph: "It\'s something like late-winter/early-spring in QC time, so who in their right mind would wear a fairy costume outdoors?"  Faeries, of course.

3. While I could never object to more Hannelore time :wink: , should she not be working alongside the other QC-girls of the Marten-exiled Coffee of Doom?

4. I do enjoy Hanners filling in the companion slot for Marten, however.  She really is the only viable person to do so, since all the other girls in Marten's life are involved with other people or things in their own lives.

Antario:
hmm an indication of passage of time from jeph, that whole snow party wasnt to long ago
come to think of it...it does kinda fit as a month or 2


--- Quote from: Loki on 20 Jan 2011, 01:31 ---
Over here in Germany (which is basically next door to you) we have plenty of cities with what they call "radial streets", ie streets leading away from a church, marketplace etc. in every direction you can imagine, because most cities are pretty old and were founded in the middle ages. Don't you have such cities?  :?

--- End quote ---

yes but thats what i would call downtown, plus the shops are pretty close together (old houses have their bottom floor turned into them)
but some old city centers indeed have houses in between, their pretty rare though (its mostly for historic value)

PureLionHeart:
The La-Li-Lu-Lo-Lo!?

http://mimg.ugo.com/200812/14244/the-patriots.jpg

pwhodges:

--- Quote from: pendrake on 20 Jan 2011, 02:50 ---should she not be working
--- End quote ---

The girls have different shifts, is all.

jwhouk:

--- Quote from: pwhodges on 20 Jan 2011, 01:54 ---Remember, America didn't have a "middle ages" like us in Europe.  The reason tourists from over there are so "ooh! aah!" in European cities is that they really haven't  seen stuff that old before.

--- End quote ---

Yeah, to us "really old stuff" is something from the 1700's. Or, in some places in the Northeast and Southwest, 1600's.

(To my shame, it's only "1800's" in my neck of the woods.)

Navigation

[0] Message Index

[#] Next page

[*] Previous page

Go to full version