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he knows

37.9k Hahahahaahahshs  one year ago
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    shark
    What is that? Thunder wart? (Glort hander) (Glarp blunder)

    one year ago
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    @cruiseman101 SAME

    one year ago
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    8,755 cruiseman101

    What in gods name is going on in this comment section

    My mortal brain is too tiny to comprehend this

    one year ago
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    41.4k Graingy

    Literally :3

    one year ago
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    Good move
    @Mousewithamachinegun123
    (I will eventually find a victim and take their front door if it is valued at less than $600 USD)

    +1 one year ago
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    63.1k TheMouse

    @WisconsinStatePolice
    I not gonna tell you that.

    one year ago
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    @Boeig

    one year ago
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    9,295 Transair56

    @Hahahahaahahshs fr wait wrong word, yep

    one year ago
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    @Funnny really damn

    one year ago
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    https://usngapp.org/
    Grid coordinates.
    @Mousewithamachinegun123

    one year ago
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    9,295 Transair56

    Holy crap I’ve never seen an war thunder post in months…

    P-61

    one year ago
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    63.1k TheMouse

    @WisconsinStatePolice
    On my door.

    one year ago
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    Where are they? @Mousewithamachinegun123

    +1 one year ago
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    63.1k TheMouse

    @WisconsinStatePolice
    I am literally staring at them right now.

    one year ago
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    63.1k TheMouse

    @Hahahahaahahshs
    Wisconsin said that I had the wrong bean.

    one year ago
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    Check the hinges on your front door @Mousewithamachinegun123

    +1 one year ago
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    @Mousewithamachinegun123 wait what do you mean

    +1 one year ago
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    63.1k TheMouse

    @WisconsinStatePolice
    How dare you say my top secret military documents are wrong!??!?

    one year ago
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    Wrong bean.

    +1 one year ago
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    @Mousewithamachinegun123 oh ok that fine

    one year ago
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    63.1k TheMouse

    @Hahahahaahahshs
    Idk. They just gave them to me.

    one year ago
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    @Mousewithamachinegun123 also WHY DID YOU GET TOP SECRET MILITARY DOCUMENTS!!!!!!

    +1 one year ago
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    @WisconsinStatePolice agreed

    +1 one year ago
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    63.1k TheMouse

    @WisconsinStatePolice
    The word "bean" and its Germanic cognates (e.g. German Bohne) have existed in common use in West Germanic languages since before the 12th century,[3] referring to broad beans, chickpeas, and other pod-borne seeds. This was long before the New World genus Phaseolus was known in Europe. With the Columbian exchange of domestic plants between Europe and the Americas, use of the word was extended to pod-borne seeds of Phaseolus, such as the common bean and the runner bean, and the related genus Vigna. The term has long been applied generally to many other seeds of similar form,[3][4] such as Old World soybeans, peas, other vetches, and lupins, and even to those with slighter resemblances, such as coffee beans, vanilla beans, castor beans, and cocoa beans. Thus the term "bean" in general usage can refer to a host of different species.[5]
    Seeds called "beans" are often included among the crops called "pulses" (legumes),[3] although the words are not always interchangeable (usage varies by plant variety and by region). Both terms, beans and pulses, are usually reserved for grain crops and thus exclude those legumes that have tiny seeds and are used exclusively for non-grain purposes (forage, hay, and silage), such as clover and alfalfa. The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization defines "BEANS, DRY" (item code 176)[5] as applicable only to species of Phaseolus. This is one of various examples of how narrower word senses enforced in trade regulations or botany often coexist in natural language with broader senses in culinary use and general use; other common examples are the narrow sense of the word nut and the broader sense of the word nut, and the fact that tomatoes are fruit, botanically speaking, but are often treated as vegetables in culinary and general usage. Relatedly, another detail of usage is that several species of plants that are sometimes called beans, including Vigna angularis (azuki bean), mungo (black gram), radiata (green gram), and aconitifolia (moth bean), were once classified as Phaseolus but later reclassified—but the taxonomic revision does not entirely stop the use of well-established senses in general usage.
    -Wikipedia

    one year ago
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    Beans

    one year ago