Now you can consider the name change My name was juste picked stupidly the first forum I joined ... and it stuck. Image Unavailable, Please Login
Many I get (But Art does need to change his screen name to ART360!), I am just interested to figure out different names and what they may mean. Examples: WAX, Spasso, EnjoyTheMusic, Doody and for the life of me, I have no clue what a Solipsist is! For me, the S is the first letter of my last name. Peter
Peter - http://www.m-w.com/cgi-bin/dictionary?book=Dictionary&va=solipsism http://www.philosophypages.com/dy/s7.htm#solm
Remember the Gong Show? My former Employer was a big Fan of the Show. His daily greeting was, Chucky Baby, Chucky Baby. Thinking about changing it though, to something Really unusual like, ......? Hmm, well if I knew I Would have done it already. Until then... Ciao, ChuckEBaby
Nibblesworth is an extremely old family name, which lots of rich history behind it. Lord Nibblesworth was a British aristocrat who financed a large Mercantile operation in Wayzeta, Minnesota, for the British crown in 1341. The Marquis de Nibbleworth floated over with Gen. Rochambea's troops during the Revoltion, and he was killed in action while saving Gen. Washintong from an errant grenade. After the war, the British and French Nibblesworths, now both on American soil, reformed the family, and using the bloodline's vast financial holding, purchsed all of what is not the northwest corner of American Samoa. There have been many a Nibbleworth in the American government. Senator Horatio Nibblesworth, for example, cast the deciding vote on the senate floor to pass S-341 in 1847, one of the most famous senate votes ever cast. Under-Secretary for Western Micronesia Trade Affairs during the Taft administrtion was my great uncle Eugene Nibblesworth. In addition, PFC Nibblesworth, of the 3974th Cavalry Regiment of Brigades, invented the flushing toilet. As such, I have decided to honor my family's anme and heritage by spewing forth the garbage I do on this website under the moniker.
Guerino Bertocchi was considered by many to be the greatest Italian mechanic to ever live. He was also an equally as good test driver. He did not work for Ferrari but in their home town of Modena for Maserati. Italians commonly address each other, particularly car guys, by their last names.
In the early nineties, I was trying to sign up for my first online service. I had to come up with a screen name. I tried Jim. It was taken. I tried many others, they all were taken. I tried Jimbo, it offered me Jimpo1. By then I was frustrated with the process, so I took it. It stuck.
"English" I am not from there, but as an Ango/Irishman living in an Italian neighborhood in Brooklyn, that is what they call me..
Well, since Bobafett was taken, I chose Darth550! Seriously, I have been a DV and a Maranello fan from the get go. PLUS, I hear the Imperial March music in my head when I get into the car! DL
It is my email address at school (initials with 3 randomly assigned digits). I use it most places that require registration. Otherwise, too many names to remember. Too bad it wasn't sjb469
Simple combination of two words: infrared: the color of my car. redline: where it spends most of its time. hey - i don't have 400 lb of torque
I love Australia. I don't live there but go every chance I get. But I do hate their speed limits and gatso cameras. It amazes me that a country that large with (generally) such good roads is so under the thumb of the speed is revenue lobby.