You might see a penghulu on the island of Borneo, but it wouldn’t be a member of the Dayak or any other tribe – after all, it’s not human, but an insectivore covered with scales!
No, you can play scales on a pangolin - it’s a stringed instrument not unlike a guitar or a very small lute.
Nah, you don’t want to play with a mandolin or any other officious bureaucrat. They keep quoting rules and are no fun whatsoever.
I would imagine Mandarins aren’t fun to play with, though not because they’re quoting rules but because they’re too busy hunting Jedi while wearing their cool armor.
Why would anyone need armor in Mandalorian? Didn’t Galadriel’s power prevent anything evil from entering?
I don’t know about evil things lurking around there, but Lothlórien is a popular tourist area and Great Britain and is the largest lake in surface area. It also inspired a well known folk song.
I don’t know if she’s been “visited” by enough guys to be considered a tourist area, but Heather Loch Lomond might have inspired a tune or two – although probably not folk songs, since her husbands were both rock musicians.
That’s funny, when my brother went to England he flew on a Locklear jet. He drove us nuts talking about the comfy seats, and golden faucets.
While on the airplane, did he by any chance sing the classic “It Came Upon a Midnight Lear?”
I don’t know, but I believe that song hails from County Clear, in Ireland.
I could chastise you for that mistake, but instead I’ll just Clare at you in hopes that my eyes will be as daggers unto your soul.
“My eyes will be as daggers unto your soul?” Sounds like a line Shakespeare would have written for King Glare or something.
My eyes were pretty dagger-like when I spotted my neighbour learing over my fence. :mad:
Was he doing that at twilight’s last leaning?
He would have been better off in a wheat field gleaming grain that had been left behind by the farmer.
Does Mr. Glean, the bald-headed Proctor and Gamble mascot, pick up after farmers as well?
For a woman in her late 80’s, Clean Elizabeth has maintained a surprisingly lush head of hair, without the thinning often seen in women of her age.
It’s a little known fact that Elizabeth kept her lush head of hair by putting ice queen on it.
But when the cold from one of those hits my sensitive tooth, I nearly cream like a little girl.
I know. I heard you through the scream door.