If we number the table left to right, so: 1 2 3 4 5 Can you match the letter below with the number above? a. Ferrari owner, gay b. Ferrari owner, gay c. Ferrari owner, gay d. Ferrari owner, gay e. Ferrari owner, gay Image Unavailable, Please Login
I think I recognise No. 5, but there's no category "Floridly Gay", "Gay as a cartload of monkeys", or "Fruitier than a 25lb Christmas cake"
I only recognise two pooftas. I must get out more Sent from my iPhone using FerrariChat.com mobile app
Hahaha It was a roller coaster of a ride but I’ll never tell all Sent from my iPhone using FerrariChat.com mobile app
Hahaha that “Dolly” will bend most things if used improperly Sent from my iPhone using FerrariChat.com mobile app
The film industry borrowed the idea from the airforce bomb loaders of old to raise and lower the camera during tracking or “dolly” shots Sent from my iPhone using FerrariChat.com mobile app
Just for the benefit of all, and as we know Bowerick will chip in at some stage, I thought the clarification of the use of the who and whom and there uses in the correct context, was important. Choosing between who and whom, either as a relative pronoun or question word, can be tricky for English language learners and native speakers of English alike. The quick test in choosing between who and whom is to substitute he or him. If he sounds better, who is correct; if him sounds right, whom is correct. That’s because as a pronoun whom is used to represent the object of either a verb or a preposition, while who represents the subject of a verb. As you were....
Sorry, you have missed the whole point of who is whom ........... whom is an old friend of fchat with 50+k posts who is now missing in action