Posted on 08/31/2010 6:34:16 PM PDT by i88schwartz
"He did everything, he went threw the Democratic process. He didn't go out and make a lot of money on Wall Street, he give himself to his community. This guy is almost pluperfect and they don't like him," MSNBC's Chris Matthews says of President Obama.
(Excerpt) Read more at realclearpolitics.com ...
He didnt go out and make a lot of money on Wall Street
No....that would be too much like work.
Instead, he whored himself out to Soros and the progressives.
Somebody give Chrissie a napkin...he’s dribbling...
I never really thought of BO as a verb but he certainly is a modified passive participle: FUBAR.
Don’t know about pluperfect, but he does resemble Disney’s Pluto
He did everything, he went threw
English depreaveaed stopid.
I think Michelle’s sincecure originally just paid $100,000 and change, but her salary was increased to over $300,000 when her husband was elected senator. Purely by coincidence, he steered $1 million of federal money to her hospital.
“Sincecure” should have been “sinecure.”
Crissy learned him a new big word.
The tingle went from Chrissy Boy’s leg up to his brain. I have to admit, it is pretty entertaining watching these libs become unhinged as the PEOPLE of this Great Nation take their stand.
I didn’t see the segment with Pence, but I can tell you that he scored a perfect 100 from the American Conservative Union in 2009, and has a lifetime score of 99.56.
Meaningless. A great many Useful Idiots said the same of Lenin.
It's a real word, but used incorrectly by preening over-educated morons whose vocabulary has run ahead of their intellect. Much like 'penultimate', 'decimate', 'neoconservative', and 'hoi polloi', it is misused 90% of the time it is uttered.
Of course not... he'd be the one demanding the $100 license fee from the 10-year-old girl the the lemonade stand... depending on who her parents voted for.
-PJ
Pluperfect? I havent heard that word since High School French, some verb tense! Chrissy is a wussy and dumb A##
pluperfect
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pluperfect
The pluperfect (from Latin plus quam perfectum more than perfect), also called past perfect in English, is a grammatical combination of past tense with the perfect, itself a combination of tense and aspect, that exists in most Indo-European languages. It is used to refer to an event that had been completed before another past action.
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