I offer this up to people who like solving puzzles.
The following can be interpreted as a sensible and logical English sentence:
If B mt put : if B . putting :
As a clue... the resulting sentence doesn't contain the word fire, but it does contain the name of a formerly almost universal domestic fuel. At least in the UK.
A man called John Julius Norwich used it on a TV show many years ago. So many that the Atlantic was probably slightly narrower.
Comments
Ohhhh, jeez.
What a bizarre coincidence!
And here I thought it was because they’d been watching too much Tim Burton.
Hilarious!
Take five merits, Nomi! I recognised that reference to the Nightmare before Christmas.
And your virtual cookies were delicious and not at all filling.
(You know... we're all wasted here!)
Oh sure, notice the Nighmare Before Christmas reference, but treat my A Christmas Story reference like common trash
.
Very nice NomiLove.
That's the most marvelously nerdy thing I've heard in a long time. Bravo.
Of that I was sure. I was never uncalm, I just felt like getting loud that's all.
As we all do from time to time... I'm going to see if I can think up something geekier.
I hope I can't.
This is Cool!
Ah! Not quite in the same league, but...
I offer this up to people who like solving puzzles.
The following can be interpreted as a sensible and logical English sentence:
If B mt put : if B . putting :
As a clue... the resulting sentence doesn't contain the word fire, but it does contain the name of a formerly almost universal domestic fuel. At least in the UK.
A man called John Julius Norwich used it on a TV show many years ago. So many that the Atlantic was probably slightly narrower.
I do not get it.