AVATAR

i agree with your privacy

i am VERY surreal but i prefere scaring people by appearing two inches from the their face when then turn round, shouting MOO or something

damn i just realised ive got a maths test tomorrow

ps. if anyone finds N30F15H too long to t write, just write Neofish or Neo or whatever, your choice

pss. Neofish has nothing to do with matrix, it turned out that way

gobsmacked You mean, your avatar isn’t you?!
Darn, and I was going to ask you for tips on putting my hair up like that…

Of course not, I’m much prettier than her! :laughing: But I can see you you could have mistaken her for me. :wink: Well, my previous avatar was me and I had spiffy hair too …that covered my entire profile. :slight_smile:

Whatever makes you think this really isn’t a picture of me? :wink:

Yeah I was one…looks evil :stuck_out_tongue:

Lex that picture is of you because llamas (it is a llama isnt it?) can spit on keys to make them work :stuck_out_tongue:

Whilst on the subject of Avatars…I’ve noticed some of the avatars are above the 120x120 that the board recommends…can we go bigger?? Do we need a special permission slip, mom’s signature, small dna sample or anything like that??

Just curious :smiley:

Actually, I found your questions to be very helpful, (and the responses you received). :slight_smile: I am new here… I’m sure that I would have asked the very same questions. Thanks!

Fatti coraggio, car amico, su!

I’ve looked up fatti in my latin dictionary and I can’t seem to find the stem for that word. I don’t think fatum is the right word. The only “car” I can find is not right either. Same thing with coraggio. I hope this is Italian, or else my Latin knowledge is very bad. Half a year of Latin down the drain![/quote]

It is italian. “Fatti” = “fai ti” 2.sg. imprt. of farsi (fare+relfective pronoun) , root in Latin facere; “il coraggio” means courage, has the root in Latin cor, cordis where the derivation is similar to Latin animosus from anima. In “car” I’ve swallowed a final “o”, :blush: , and so it is “caro” from Latin carus. The whole phrase means “Be brave, my friend!”
I just thought it would be interesting to introduce a “vulgar Latin heir” to this forum of ours. Well, maybe it’s not such a good idea…