A cuppa Jill
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Dihydrogen monoxide
I prefer oxidane
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Just like bears
Go on...?
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What a moist choice.
It’s a play on the double meaning of moist
Moist = damp
And
Moist = cool
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Like Joe for coffee.
I dunno, man. I've heard it being referred to as "aqua-cola". I've also heard it's incredibly addictive, which makes sense because not a lot of time has to pass at all before I start to crave more of it. It's practically impossible to resist.
Should've never been started on that shit. I dunno why it's so normalised in society...
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Never drink anything and you'll be immortal
Killed by your own saliva
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Like Joe for coffee.
The moist maker
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Like Joe for coffee.
"Stay away from da aqua!"
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I prefer my ice medium rare.
You've never tried ice til you've had it poached
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Like Joe for coffee.
"Kraneberger" - "Château Tap" in German.
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In Germany das kühle Nass. The cool wet.
OG German nickname is Gänsewein - the goose's wine.
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I dunno, man. I've heard it being referred to as "aqua-cola". I've also heard it's incredibly addictive, which makes sense because not a lot of time has to pass at all before I start to crave more of it. It's practically impossible to resist.
Should've never been started on that shit. I dunno why it's so normalised in society...
The ultimate gateway drug. EVERY addict of any kind started by drinking water. They should ban that shit.
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The ultimate gateway drug. EVERY addict of any kind started by drinking water. They should ban that shit.
100% of water addicts have died
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Go on...?
The modern English word "bear" originally came from a proto-Germanic word meaning one of "brown one" or possibly "wild animal". There was an actual name for bears, but speaking it was taboo in case it caused a bear to appear, so the euphemism eventually replaced the real name.
When I learned this originally, I was taught that the true name was lost to time, but Wikipedia just says it was "arkto" so whatever.
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The modern English word "bear" originally came from a proto-Germanic word meaning one of "brown one" or possibly "wild animal". There was an actual name for bears, but speaking it was taboo in case it caused a bear to appear, so the euphemism eventually replaced the real name.
When I learned this originally, I was taught that the true name was lost to time, but Wikipedia just says it was "arkto" so whatever.
Shhhh! Do you want bears? That's how you get bears. The name was lost, never type it again.
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"Kraneberger" - "Château Tap" in German.
kenne noch Hahnenquelle
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I love that one. I'm right in thinking it's specifically tap water, right? (As in the water provided by the council, you wouldn't use it for Evian or whatever).
Yes specifically tap water