@Meta Well they have the same names for days of the weeks as we do, so it's probably still a seven day week.
Well they have the same names for days of the weeks as we do, so it's probably still a seven day week.
That doesn't disprove there being an 8th day of the week. It just means that nothing interesting ever happens on Blernsday.
I am committed to pursuing this ridiculous line of thought all the way to the bitter end.
MCs on the paper with their murder metaphors need to deal with the literal resurrector.
@ Condo: This is kinda the wrong thread for that :|
Koe ga kikoeru/Yuku beki michi yubi sashite iru
Sarasara nagaru kaze no naka de hitori/Watashi utatte imasu
Hug a Sableye~ :3
My experience with Boondock Saints is that it's an entertaining action film, but it's not as smart as it thinks it is, and most of its internal logic falls apart the instant you start thinking about it. Whether that makes it good or bad is for the individual to decide.
MCs on the paper with their murder metaphors need to deal with the literal resurrector.
Are you suggesting they have the same weeks as Discworld?
Life is simple: it has no nontrivial normal subgroups.
I've never read any Discworld books, and everything I've read about the series on TV Tropes has convinced me that they're not the books for me.
MCs on the paper with their murder metaphors need to deal with the literal resurrector.
I guess it's a particular brand of humor. Anyway, the week has an 8th day called Octeday.
Life is simple: it has no nontrivial normal subgroups.
We might be able to tell if Equestria is a flat world by the shape of the shadow on the moon.
Life is simple: it has no nontrivial normal subgroups.
Anyway, I think Equestria is most probably round like Earth.
Life is simple: it has no nontrivial normal subgroups.
Twilight has a globe, so it's definitely a round world.
That may or may not be her own planet.
Unless their planet has an Earth-like sister planet, it's definitely theirs.
Ah, I forgot about the Globe too.
Life is simple: it has no nontrivial normal subgroups.
Well, then, what do they do on the other side of the world when they need the sun to rise?