Caturday - Adoption Bamboozle 1 comments
happy_frog
· 1 year ago
What cat? I see no cat.
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That's How Coo Do 2 comments
An Endangered Species 5 comments
Froggos '23 #114/Froppy Friday - Anne Unusual Frop 1 comments
happy_frog
· 1 year ago
For those not unhealthly obsessed with cartoons, that's Anne Boonchuy, the protagonist of Amphibia.
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Edited 1 year ago
Froggos '23 #113 - Frog in Cannabis Field in Southern Oregon 3 comments
happy_frog
· 1 year ago
Y'all know what day it is. That's right. 4/20. And while I won't be blazing it, I did have some hemp cookies.
They're not great, honestly. But I do feel somewhat tingly and the roof mouth is numb. Didn't really expect that.
So now I guess I should veg out and watch The Big Lebowski.
1
They're not great, honestly. But I do feel somewhat tingly and the roof mouth is numb. Didn't really expect that.
So now I guess I should veg out and watch The Big Lebowski.
Froggos '23 #112 - Movie Night 2 comments
Terry's Log, Shark Date: 19.04.23 4 comments
Weird Wednesday - Hot Soup Helps a Sore Throat 1 comments
happy_frog
· 1 year ago
There's a lot of weird stuff in the world, especially at this point in history. Some weirdness is best avoided, but some is worth celebrating.
*
And who better to kick off this series than perhaps the most famous weird Wednesday of them all.
This incarnation of Wednesday is from the 1992 Addams Family animated series, and it's the one I'm most familiar with.
What's noteworthy about her is that she most often wears a smile and speaks in a soft, almost comforting voice, as opposed to most gloomy renditions of the character.
But that doesn't mean she's any less creepy. In fact, one could argue that the constrast accentuates the feeling of uneasiness she gives off.
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*
And who better to kick off this series than perhaps the most famous weird Wednesday of them all.
This incarnation of Wednesday is from the 1992 Addams Family animated series, and it's the one I'm most familiar with.
What's noteworthy about her is that she most often wears a smile and speaks in a soft, almost comforting voice, as opposed to most gloomy renditions of the character.
But that doesn't mean she's any less creepy. In fact, one could argue that the constrast accentuates the feeling of uneasiness she gives off.
That cannot have been a fun meeting 1 comments
happy_frog
· 1 year ago
Well, clearly no one informed them that nuclear power is the cleanest, safest, and most efficient type of energy available.
1
AI is smarter than we are 1 comments
happy_frog
· 1 year ago
So the machines have already surpassed us. The age of man is coming to an end.
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Froggos '23 #111 - An Offer You Can't Refuse 3 comments
Tako Tuesday - Jellybean Octos 3 comments
happy_frog
· 1 year ago
Note: Not actually jellybeans, but octo eggs. Although, octopus eggs are sometimes called sea grapes, for some reason.
2
Those kooky Yankees… 1 comments
happy_frog
· 1 year ago
The same? I might be out of the loop, but last I checked, no one from those countries shot a teen (twice) for accidently ringing their doorbell.
3
Froggos '23 #110 - Tapir Frog (Totally Real, You Guys!) 2 comments
happy_frog
· 1 year ago
Were you expecting a bamboozle. Well, I have bamboozled that expectation, for these long-nosed leapers are quite real.
First discovered in 2019, and formally described in 2022, they've long been known to the inhabitants of the Western Amazon who call them rana danta (lit. tapir frog).
Since they're a newly discovered species, not much is known about them. What is known however, is that they're a burrowing frog spending most of their time underground, particularly in mud. Their chocolate coloring helps with camouflage. (But, like the chocolate frog of Australia, they're not actually made of chocolate.)
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First discovered in 2019, and formally described in 2022, they've long been known to the inhabitants of the Western Amazon who call them rana danta (lit. tapir frog).
Since they're a newly discovered species, not much is known about them. What is known however, is that they're a burrowing frog spending most of their time underground, particularly in mud. Their chocolate coloring helps with camouflage. (But, like the chocolate frog of Australia, they're not actually made of chocolate.)
Sailor Monday 1 comments
happy_frog
· 1 year ago
Thankfully, my current job doesn't drain me on a daily basis as much as my previous ones did.
Caturday - Cat-erpillar Blep 1 comments
Thou Hast Been Rick Scrolled 2 comments
happy_frog
· 1 year ago
So, some of the comments on this vid say that Old English sounds pretty similar to Danish.
Makes sense, I guess, since the Anglo-Saxons came from an area that is now Denmark. It does make me wonder how much of this a modern Dane would understand.
Some words sound similar to German as well.
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Makes sense, I guess, since the Anglo-Saxons came from an area that is now Denmark. It does make me wonder how much of this a modern Dane would understand.
Some words sound similar to German as well.