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The Criminal Mind Vs The Thrill of Life
Some people get so caught up in crime that you can call them a scumbag and they like it. While others are so caught up in the thrill of life that going to jail for 10 days because of some bs charge means nothing short of a burden on there Job resume.?? So where do you stand as scumbag or a trill seeker?? Me personally, I am offended at the scumbag charge, while yes I have a history of criminal activity, I never perused a life of crime. So I am more of a thrill seeker than a scumbag. Where do you stand??
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I am definitely a trill bag. Listen to me trill
"la la la la la la la la la la" |
Thrill-seeking scumbag, here.
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I'm more of a trollolo seeker...
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thrill (thrl)
v. thrilled, thrill·ing, thrills v.tr. 1. To cause to feel a sudden intense sensation; excite greatly. 2. To give great pleasure to; delight. See Synonyms at enrapture. 3. To cause to quiver, tremble, or vibrate. v.intr. 1. To feel a sudden quiver of excitement or emotion. 2. To quiver, tremble, or vibrate. n. 1. A quivering or trembling caused by sudden excitement or emotion. 2. A source or cause of excitement or emotion. 3. Pathology A slight palpable vibration that often accompanies certain cardiac and circulatory abnormalities. [Middle English thrillen, alteration of thirlen, to pierce, from Old English thrlian, from threl, hole; see ter-2 in Indo-European roots.] thrilling·ly adv. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition copyright ©2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2009. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. thrill [θrɪl] n 1. a sudden sensation of excitement and pleasure seeing his book for sale gave him a thrill 2. a situation producing such a sensation it was a thrill to see Rome for the first time 3. a trembling sensation caused by fear or emotional shock 4. (Medicine / Pathology) Pathol an abnormal slight tremor associated with a heart or vascular murmur, felt on palpation vb 1. to feel or cause to feel a thrill 2. to tremble or cause to tremble; vibrate or quiver [Old English thȳrlian to pierce, from thyrel hole; see nostril, through] Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003 minus 2 trust points for misspelling, plus 2 trust points for identifying a misspelling. plus 5 trust points correcting a misspelling, |
rule follower mostly.
not a life o crime guy. I get sufficient thrills in all other areas of my life, so I don't need criminal activity and the tension of maybe getting caught as source of excitement. I don't register on your scale, sorry. |
well good for you bigv..
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thanks man.
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We Oregonians are trillium seekers.
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Wait, what - no Jadzia Dax comments?
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It occurred to me; but, I discarded the idea as being too in depth after my sci-fi trivia riddle fizzled in the Riddle me this, haiku man! thread.
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