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#120636 01/28/04 08:27 PM
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Dear WW: I can remember at skinnydip pond seeing two
big kids hold flatulent fatso, and hold lighted match near
the orifice. A bluish and yellow flame went both ways,
fatso screamed, and all the little kids thought it hilarious.


#120637 01/28/04 08:35 PM
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Gotta watch that flatulence around kids. They seem to find it to be the most amusing of all kinds of humor.

..and then it mutates, somehow, into guy humor.

(not much of a stretch there)




#120638 01/28/04 09:06 PM
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not much of a stretch

Hey! You're just jealous because we're more in touch with our inner child.


#120639 01/28/04 09:28 PM
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And what might the penalty be for autopedophily?


#120640 01/29/04 02:40 AM
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..and then it mutates, somehow, into guy humor.
Ungulents. <eg>


#120641 01/30/04 03:51 AM
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Taking this excess of gas back to Proto-Indo-European, philologists reconstruct two roots for 'fart': *perd- 'to fart loudly' (*prdi-s whence OE feortan and Welsh rhech 'fart') and *pezd- 'to pass wind softly' whence Greek bdeo, Latin pedo 'to fart', podex 'butt, behind', pedis 'louse'. The Latin podex also gives the German words der Podex and der Popo 'butt'.


#120642 01/30/04 02:30 PM
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Vive le Petomane!


#120643 02/01/04 01:50 PM
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This seems like it's appropriate for this thread. It takes a little while to load, so have patience
http://www.inlibertyandfreedom.com/Flash/splishsplashbaby.swf


#120644 02/01/04 07:23 PM
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We see this same r<>z,s correspondence in the Latin 1st/2nd declension genitive plural endings -arum/orum which was from an earlier -asum/osum, as well as in the French chaise form chaire. But I wonder, I've heard of IE satem and centum languages and Celtic P and Q languages. Are there IE perd- and pezd- languages?


#120645 02/01/04 07:40 PM
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Are there IE perd- and pezd- languages?

Faldage-- I know what you mean. I thought of Latin rhotacization, the -Vsum/-Vzum/-Vrum of the genitive plural. Also you see this in honos, honor. As for the -r-/-z- alternation, I had to take a look at the handbooks on this one. Brugmann reconstructed a series of fricatives s, z, S, and Z (as well as þ, and ð) for PIE, but most IEists today only have -s- (~ -z- as an allophone).

The weird thing about chaire ~ chaise is that the 'r' in kathedra yielded an 's', the opposite of the Latin direction.


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