--On Sunday, December 19, 2004 3:16 PM + Ron Fletcher
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Mathias geschreibt
Until two years ago, I had a Gaultier-beard
and matching long hair.
Is this commonly called the 'goatee-beard'? (Which, I had always
presumed meant like a Billy-goat).
Strictly
Dear Stewart,
may I add that I did say. Until two years ago, I had a Gaultier-beard
and matching long hair. Then came along a girl friend of mine who
radically changed my modes. So, for now you should count me as
clean-shaven :^)
Stewart McCoy mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] schrieb:
Dear All,
The
Since this list is now archived on the net and google seems to find the
individual posts quite rapidly, then if you don't want this message with
its link google searchable you should ask Wayne to remove.
Dear all,
on Sun, 19 Dec 2004, Ron Fletcher wrote:
Could someone host a page of our
Am 19 Dec 2004 um 17:26 hat Mathias Rösel geschrieben:
well, there certainly is a pun in the naming. I had to look up German
spitzbart, which is that very beard I was referring to, in my
dictionary and there it was: goatee. I suppose there wasn't much
difference in pronounciation of goatee
Indeed.
RT
__
Roman M. Turovsky
http://polyhymnion.org/swv
Google found that page long ago.
Wayne (no beard)
Since this list is now archived on the net and google seems to find the
individual posts quite rapidly, then if you don't want this message with
its link google searchable
Count me in the one to three weeks of stubble group, which seems neither
here
nor there. BTW what number and length of whiskers constitutes a beard?
A beard is not a matter of number or length, it is an aesthetic question.
Does it have a consistancy, or has it bald spots (with no political
Stewart, a very well done and nice compendium of the various comments.
But I reserve the right to make just this night's comments on the thread, as
I've been off line a couple of days. Then I accept your choice (and concur
with it) to end the thread.
Then again I don't have to reserve the right,