tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2629301231907528990.post4996264498705263168..comments2024-03-26T18:01:57.609+00:00Comments on Inky Fool: FelchM.H. Forsythhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01464964455944509750noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2629301231907528990.post-767174767376794092010-06-14T16:50:12.589+01:002010-06-14T16:50:12.589+01:00I heard about it pre-google as well. We had better...I heard about it pre-google as well. We had better developed sense of passing on information before wikipedia ruined it all.M.H. Forsythhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01464964455944509750noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2629301231907528990.post-23518680356623953222010-06-14T16:38:52.097+01:002010-06-14T16:38:52.097+01:00Heh... this made me laugh out loud and gives me fl...Heh... this made me laugh out loud and gives me flashbacks to a camp in the West Australian bush. Takes me straight back to year 12 camp (possibly retreat, even) when the way cool 'alternative' kids (when it was actually, like, alternative to be alternative) explained this word to me - they were so alternative they spoke to people who weren't cool. It was just way too many concepts introduced to a naive 17 year old all at once, and I have never really been shocked again since. <br /><br />Of course we then proceeded to use this word all week, and for the rest of the year, and our teachers thought it was just some odd bonding thing. I think it may have ended up in our yearbook - this was before Google, after all. <br /><br />A disturbing thought: how did the other kids know this? Without Google? Hmmm...The Antipodeannoreply@blogger.com