To: Mountain Bike Vomit Carnage
“Fo shizzle mah nizzle” (I momentarily forget what play that was in.)
To: Revolting cat!
Fo shizzle mah nizzle (I momentarily forget what play that was in.) If I'm not mistaken, that was Henry XVII, part 4. Although it may have been Henry XVI, part 23. (Sorry, just too many Henry's to keep track of.)
11 posted on
09/17/2011 9:14:05 PM PDT by
Bob
To: Revolting cat!
That wasn’t Shakespeare, but his little known office assistant Sir Mix-A-Lot.
16 posted on
09/17/2011 9:23:12 PM PDT by
randog
(Tap into America!)
To: Revolting cat!
Fo shizzle mah nizzle (I momentarily forget what play that was in.)"Merchant of Da Hood," I think.
29 posted on
09/17/2011 9:50:01 PM PDT by
Allegra
(Hey! Stop looking at my tagline like that.)
To: Revolting cat!
Fo shizzle mah nizzle (I momentarily forget what play that was in.)Or was it "The Taming of the Ho?"
30 posted on
09/17/2011 9:53:06 PM PDT by
Allegra
(Hey! Stop looking at my tagline like that.)
To: Revolting cat!
Actually “set you teeth on edge” is found in the Old testament. More specifically: “The sins of the father have set the teeth of the sons on edge”
44 posted on
09/17/2011 11:13:21 PM PDT by
mdmathis6
(Christ came not to make mankind into God but to put God into men!)
To: Revolting cat!
“Fo shizzle ma nizzle”
Definitely from Julius Ceasar, as in
“Et tu, Brute?”
“Fo shizzle ma nizzle”. (for sure, my ni****)
Shakespeare was way ahead of his time in his Ebonics writing style.
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