The DU Lounge
Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsYour Sunday LOLcats (dial-up warning) Butterfly Child Edition
[img][/img]
[img][/img]
[img][/img]
[img][/img]
[img][/img]
Sez AWW
[img][/img]
[img][/img]
[img][/img]
[img][/img]
[img][/img]
[img][/img]
[img][/img]
[img][/img]
Maik SQUEEEE
[img][/img]
[img][/img]
[img][/img]
[img][/img]
[img][/img]
[img][/img]
[img][/img]
[img][/img]
[img][/img]
Nao sez AWW lots moar kthnxbai
[img][/img]
[img][/img]
[img][/img]
[img][/img]
[img][/img]
[img][/img]
[img][/img]

Tarzanrock
(1,250 posts)Terrific!
SheltieLover
(73,203 posts)
nuxvomica
(13,590 posts)"not puffy"
"Disney on Ice"
"What's your story?"
"I told you it was scary"
"Old school costumes"
"a trampoline"
"When you haven't seen your dog"
"Good, this is..."
Thanks for another fun roundup, SCE! Have a great week!
Collimator
(1,962 posts)This image is enchanting!
But on this one, I am going to have to indulge in some irritating pedantry.
Apparently, it was NOT that unusual for Vikings to physically haul their longboats over dry land for stretches of a given journey. There's even a specific word for the practice, and if anyone wants to out pedantic me, ( or go grammar nazi on my ass for the misuse of pedantic in the previous clause), and supply the correct term for this ancient Viking practice, please feel free to do so.
Happy Sunday and thank you SalmonChantedEvening.
mnhtnbb
(32,747 posts)Collimator
(1,962 posts)Yes! That's it! Thank you!
Now I can go back to sleep.
ShazzieB
(21,477 posts)por·tage
Origin
late Middle English: from French, from porter carry. The sense relating to carrying between navigable waters dates from the late 17th century.
So not a Viking word!
soldierant
(8,888 posts)which they were the first Europeans to know about. A surprising number settled in France. They even reached what is now Russia - where the locals told them, "Hey, you guys seem to be really well organized. Why don't you stay here and become our ruling class?" - not in those exact words, of course - and many did - which explains a lot IMO.
So different from the Ukrainian Cossacks, who mercenaries, for hire to any riler, but not permanently sworn to any ruler.
ShazzieB
(21,477 posts)The Vikings definitely did get around, as we well know. It would probably take more research into the history of Norse languages than I have time for to find out if that word was adopted adopted into Old Norse from French, so I hereby declare this to be a moot point!
soldierant
(8,888 posts)that portage was a Viking word, just that they could easily have come by it honestly after some settled in France. And my real point was we don't really know diddly about the Vikings. They are highly understudied.
Bread and Circuses
(1,057 posts)Quite common . Its been done for hundreds, if not thousands of years.
Easterncedar
(4,853 posts)Disney on ice, indeed.
Loved the warning label t-shirts, too.
And the exquisite lizard.
Thanks, SCE!
GoneOffShore
(17,885 posts)JMCKUSICK
(3,772 posts)I especially loved the butterfly boy and the Ape at the end.
MiHale
(12,097 posts)
gademocrat7
(11,639 posts)Thank you for another wonderful edition of Sunday LOLcats. The gorilla hugging a man was heartwarming..👏🤗💙
planetc
(8,679 posts)calimary
(87,610 posts)Heck, I still do, and Im a grandma now.
wordstroken
(1,290 posts)🦋
planetc
(8,679 posts)Everybody's got cardboard, and I'll becha somebody sells colored cellophane. How about some paper doilies to edge the wings?
calimary
(87,610 posts)If you trimmed the main cardboards into wing-shape, you could edge the whole thing with paper doilies and it would look so lacey and ethereal!
Cut the whole thing out in one piece, with a middle section (between the wings) on which you could secuo anchor long ribbons in several places. Make em all long enough that you can tie em around you. Id do two sets of ties for each side. The upper set ties over your shoulders and the lower other set ties around your waist.
Or something of that sort.
planetc
(8,679 posts)And don't you need a little loop under the top edges of the wings so children could put their fingers in the loops and actually flap the wings? Then you'd call your parent or adults their friend with a phone camera, and you could be on Tik Tok. I had no idea you were such a craft nerd, Calimary.
sl8
(16,740 posts)Pics / biography of Andre Bauma:
https://legendsandlegaciesofafrica.org/andrebauma.php
Ndakasi obituary:
https://virunga.org/wildlife/primates/mountain-gorillas/gorilla-orphans/ndakasi/
wordstroken
(1,290 posts)
Festivito
(13,772 posts)Most enjoyable.
HeartsCanHope
(1,283 posts)Thanks so much! Have a great Sunday!
Karadeniz
(24,633 posts)malaise
(288,441 posts)as always 😀
underpants
(192,524 posts)
DinahMoeHum
(23,138 posts)
murielm99
(32,307 posts)Great, as usual.
rogerballard
(4,017 posts)Happy Sunday!
58Sunliner
(6,011 posts)The octopus is amazing.
ShazzieB
(21,477 posts)I thought they were the cat's pajamas when I was a kid, but now? Yikes!
republianmushroom
(21,182 posts)Niagara
(10,812 posts)Happy Sunday!
TommieMommy
(2,316 posts)mwmisses4289
(2,027 posts)Thank you for helping start the week with a smile.
pandr32
(13,367 posts)I sure needed this. Thank you.
Clouds Passing
(5,646 posts)
wordstroken
(1,290 posts)

Polybius
(20,745 posts)Lol, talk about retro!
BobTheSubgenius
(12,073 posts)yet impressed the chicks seem not.
Also, I'm old enough that I actually had some of that lino (somewhat more muted, but same design) put into a kitchen reno I did decades ago. Not my proudest moment, in retrospect.
Thank you, as always, SCE!!!
Wild blueberry
(7,865 posts)Love this collection. You're the best.
blogslug
(38,983 posts)
ILikePie92
(223 posts)Love these!
NCgayguy
(255 posts)electric_blue68
(23,593 posts)The puffer fish! 😄😄😄😄🩷
Bread and Circuses
(1,057 posts)LittleGirl
(8,799 posts)for the chuckles and smiles. Sigh.