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tyr: pleeeeease go out with me?? jenn erica: *sigh* okay... tyr: Really?!? jenn erica: Why not? meet me at this place at 8:00. tyr: Hot dang! a date! finally, I can enjoy the company of a nice woman, unlike my-- tyr: wife. woman: hi, sweet-ums!
Well, Jen, at least he’s male and he’s paying attention to you.
Besides, you can’t convince me that you’ve never knowingly dated a married man. As the All-Purpose Female, you’ve no doubt had experience playing the Other Woman.
There’s a question as to whether the entities known as “giants” (jǫtunar) were physically large in the sense that we now think of giants. In some stories, such as Þrymskviða, their apparance and size is similar to that of the gods, but in the Gylfaginning, Þórr and his companions take shelter in a cave with five chambers that turns out to be the discarded glove of a jǫtunn. Some of them were decribed as monstrous, deformed and bearing multiple heads (Týr’s grandmother, in the poem Hymiskviða, is described as a giantess with nine hundred heads).
zero about 14 years ago
No divorce in Asgaard huh?
Kirokithikis about 14 years ago
UH-OH!!! Now Tyr’s in for it
Coyoty Premium Member about 14 years ago
You either take her out, or she’ll take you out.
lewisbower about 14 years ago
A wedding ring is like a tourniquet It cuts off your circulation.
Airboy20 about 14 years ago
I’m picturing a fifteen-foot Helga (shudder).
fritzoid Premium Member about 14 years ago
Well, Jen, at least he’s male and he’s paying attention to you.
Besides, you can’t convince me that you’ve never knowingly dated a married man. As the All-Purpose Female, you’ve no doubt had experience playing the Other Woman.
runar about 14 years ago
There’s a question as to whether the entities known as “giants” (jǫtunar) were physically large in the sense that we now think of giants. In some stories, such as Þrymskviða, their apparance and size is similar to that of the gods, but in the Gylfaginning, Þórr and his companions take shelter in a cave with five chambers that turns out to be the discarded glove of a jǫtunn. Some of them were decribed as monstrous, deformed and bearing multiple heads (Týr’s grandmother, in the poem Hymiskviða, is described as a giantess with nine hundred heads).
Basqueian about 14 years ago
Huuuge … tracts o’ land!