Not sure why this is in the Spiritual and Religious board, but I enjoyed that regardless.

I do have an answer for the near-miss one tho. They missed each other, while they were 'near'. It wasn't that they 'nearly' missed, it's that they were near when they missed each other.
Ghengis Chron Reviewed by Ghengis Chron on . i tried this before, but i'm doing it again... the english language... no matter how stupid or minimal post it... shit that just doesn't make sense... some examples....: when two planes almost hit they call it a near miss... it's a near hit... a collision is a near miss ~boom~ look! they nearly missed (yeah it's GC) the plural of goose is geese, so why isn't a group of moose called meese? you drive on a parkway but park on a drive way.... Let's face it -- English is a crazy language. There is no egg in eggplant nor ham in Rating: 5