CheekY
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oh I know one who did it a couple of months ago
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'Stop giving me a hard time about being single' If you're single, chances are you've been asked the following three questions: Why aren't you married? Why aren't you married? and the very, very popular: Why aren't you married? ... give or take another 999,999,997 more such questions. Unfortunately, I can’t fix you up with any cute guys or girls to help you avoid these questions in the future. However, I can fix you up with some good snappy comebacks to fling at anyone who dares to question your single status. So, next time somebody dares to ask you that “Why aren't you married?” question, pause, smile sagaciously (I love that word; it means “wisely”), and offer up one of the following. Or, just review them for your own personal satisfaction. 1. In the beginning, there were no elliptical trainers or low-fat/high-fiber muffins, and so people lived to only about 40-something. Maximum. Meaning, the pressure was on to get married before age 25. However, today, thanks to medical advances, we can all hope to live to 80. Easy. Meaning? Even if we marry at age 40, that's still 35, 45, even 55 years to be with a mate. Plenty of time to be married. What's the hurry? 2. Married people are not necessarily better catches simply because they were caught. I mean, have you taken a look at some of the married people out there? Seriously. Even Frankenstein got married. Obviously married people are not superior people. 3. Meanwhile, look at some of our cool single role models: * Catwoman: Single. * Buddha: Single. * The Lone Ranger: Single. Actually, virtually all superhero types are single: Superman, Wonder Woman, Dudley Do-Right. And then there’s The Ultimate Superhero: God—also single. 4. Plus, when you think about it, there’s no such thing as a Stepford Single Woman. 5. Why limit myself to being dissatisfied by one relationship when I can be dissatisfied by an infinite variety? 6. It’s interesting how our culture has the expression “happily married,” but no expression “happily single.” And those words are 100% certified by the US Census Bureau. Statistics show that although married men are reported to be happier than single men (surprise, surprise!)—single women are reported to be happier than married women (also a big surprise, surprise!). Meaning? This only furthers the irony that single women are branded as "unhappy” and “lonely” and “loser-esque"—when single women are just boldly holding out for the right situation, rather than getting married just to get married. 7. It's easy to become married. Millions of people do it every year. If you want to pressure me to become something, hey, why not pick something a little more challenging—like an astrophysicist. 8. True love is rare. That's why it's called "love" and not "really like" or "settling." And why we don't say: "I’m settling for you, honey" over candlelit dinners. True love is worth waiting for…and that’s what I’m doing. SOURCE: http://msn.match.com/msn/article.aspx?arti...544657>1=6657
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It symbolizes virginity. I think the armenian tradition is that when a girl gets married, if she's a virgin the next day after the wedding night the husband's family sends a red apple to the girl's parents to tell them they're pleased that the girl is a virgin? Ok now I'm confused lol
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I don’t know much about science or anything but this has been on my mind all day. If our brain is what controls everything all the feelings emotions and so on then how come when we are in love or heartbroken we relate it to our heart? Or people say follow your heart but what does it mean? Does it have to do with the soul? Is there even a soul? When someone is kind we say he or she is kind hearted...where did this connection with the heart come from and why? When we're heartbroken and sad why does it feel hard in the chest and not in the head? And why do we cry when we're sad? Do my questions even make any sense?? Could anyone answer this because I couldn't find anything online or maybe I didn't search well.
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ohh alsmot forgot to mention the words "dzyadzya" or "tsyotsya" hahahah when people refer to women(especially older) as "morkour" and older men as "hopar" write kool instead of cool say tsaved tanem aziz jan
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Yeah the marriage and the having children questions are annoying! I've never been asked but when I hear others asking a singe person or a just married couple it still bugs me. I hate it when people or especially older people say "@nkeruhi jan" to a young girl! how most people always start a joke with "uremn"! also the word "akhchi" or when sometimes something bugs someone they say "nents em uzoum dran khpem" I mean come on mind your own business what do you care what someone you don't even know is wearing or doing?!
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what's wrong with non armenian men?
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if you download 2 firewalls or antviruses etc is it possible? will the pc work properly?
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PATTERSON, Ga. - Ashlyn Blocker’s parents and kindergarten teachers all describe her the same way: fearless. So they nervously watch her plunge full-tilt into a childhood deprived of natural alarms. In the school cafeteria, teachers put ice in 5-year-old Ashlyn’s chili. If her lunch is scalding hot, she’ll gulp it down anyway. On the playground, a teacher’s aide watches Ashlyn from within 15 feet, keeping her off the jungle gym and giving chase when she runs. If she takes a hard fall, Ashlyn won’t cry. Ashlyn is among a tiny number of people in the world known to have congenital insensitivity to pain with anhidrosis, or CIPA — a rare genetic disorder that makes her unable to feel pain. “Some people would say that’s a good thing. But no, it’s not,” says Tara Blocker, Ashlyn’s mother. “Pain’s there for a reason. It lets your body know something’s wrong and it needs to be fixed. I’d give anything for her to feel pain.” The untreatable disease also makes Ashlyn incapable of sensing extreme temperatures — hot or cold — disabling her body’s ability to cool itself by sweating. Otherwise, her senses are normal. Ashlyn can feel the texture of nickels and dimes she sorts into piles on her bedroom floor, the heft of the pink backpack she totes to school and the embrace of a hug. She feels hunger cravings for her favorite after-school snack, pickles and strawberry milk. That’s because the genetic mutation that causes CIPA only disrupts the development of the small nerve fibers that carry sensations of pain, heat and cold to the brain. “There are all kinds of different nerve cells that help us feel different sensations,” says Dr. Felicia Axelrod, a professor of pediatrics and neurology at New York University School of Medicine. “You can have one sense removed, just like you can lose your hearing but still smell things.” continued at http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6379795/
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Which is the best? Norton, Mcafee, others?
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what program? i didn't watch tv especially h1 lol
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Ok what do you people think about the "hnazand es?" that the priest asks the girl during the Armenian wedding ceremony (and the male "Ter es?"). Do you think it should be asked? Because nowadays (almost) no one is "hnazand" and it's like lying in the house of God. And besides, do you accept that the Bible says the man is the head and the woman must "hnazandvel" to him. Why so .... (can't find the word lol) towards women? Were/are we THAT evil that we need to be controlled?? lol
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I think this would be a stupid thing to do because first we can't afford to lose 50 soldiers and second of all it would be dangerous to us because we're surrounded mainly by muslim countries and other Armenians living in muslim countries. It's not worth sacrificing 50 men just to look good in front of Bush or whoever. (Just my opinion lol)
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wow I never thought people could discuss "genitals" for so long
