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Posted: Sat Jun 19, 2010 7:40 pm
by Kaks
Commander McLane wrote:
Feel free to consult this comprehensive list for more ideas. :wink:
It does lack my personal favourite: a gloom of goffs! :D

Ok, this is my last attempt: a hindrance of trumbles?

Posted: Sat Jun 19, 2010 8:11 pm
by Killer Wolf
how about "lot"?

Posted: Sun Jun 27, 2010 5:34 am
by Porksmuggler
DaddyHoggy wrote:
A bucket of (Lavian Fried) Trumbles
what side items would come with the bucket of KFT?

I'm not allowed to post links yet, but someone please google oolite kentucky.

Posted: Sun Jun 27, 2010 9:34 am
by JazHaz
Porksmuggler wrote:
DaddyHoggy wrote:
A bucket of (Lavian Fried) Trumbles
what side items would come with the bucket of KFT?

I'm not allowed to post links yet, but someone please google oolite kentucky.
:lol: there is actually a place called Oolite in Kentucky!

Posted: Sun Jun 27, 2010 9:57 am
by Smivs
JazHaz wrote:
:lol: there is actually a place called Oolite in Kentucky!
Doesn't sound as forward-looking as our Oolite :cry:

Posted: Sun Jun 27, 2010 12:30 pm
by Killer Wolf
"Most of the people who lived in Oolite are dead now"
damn, Thargoids..?

Posted: Sun Jun 27, 2010 4:32 pm
by ZygoUgo
A tumble of Trumbles..? It's err.. got the word tum in it
Dashing of Trumbles?
A harvest of Trumbles?
Err..

Posted: Sun Jun 27, 2010 5:28 pm
by Porksmuggler
Smivs wrote:
JazHaz wrote:
:lol: there is actually a place called Oolite in Kentucky
Doesn't sound as forward-looking as our Oolite :cry:
"The night watchman in the quarries above Oolite, Bill Dick Greer"..."he was like most residents of Oolite who often had monikers that described them or some part of their personality."

I can just see ol' William Richard "Sooty" Greer hold up on that rock reading the Hermit Almanac.

There's also a Oolite Rd. in Bath. It's the name for a type of limestone used there, known as Bath Stone.

Posted: Sun Jun 27, 2010 6:22 pm
by DaddyHoggy
Porksmuggler wrote:
Smivs wrote:
JazHaz wrote:
:lol: there is actually a place called Oolite in Kentucky
Doesn't sound as forward-looking as our Oolite :cry:
"The night watchman in the quarries above Oolite, Bill Dick Greer"..."he was like most residents of Oolite who often had monikers that described them or some part of their personality."

I can just see ol' William Richard "Sooty" Greer hold up on that rock reading the Hermit Almanac.

There's also a Oolite Rd. in Bath. It's the name for a type of limestone used there, known as Bath Stone.
Welcome Porksmuggler - I found Oolite Road sometime ago - I have friends from Bath - there's a link I posted to the google maps page somewhere deep, deep, deep in the caverns of old posts on this forum.

Oh, and "Welcome to the friendliest board this side of Riedquat"(tm)

Posted: Sun Jun 27, 2010 6:30 pm
by JazHaz
ZygoUgo wrote:
A tumble of Trumbles..? It's err.. got the word tum in it
Dashing of Trumbles?
A harvest of Trumbles?
Err..
Considering that Trumbles were supposed to be Tribbles from Star Trek, I have visions of the original ST:TOS episode where the tribbles get into the grain stores of a station, and we ended up with millions of them.

Surely the correct term is simply, a plague of Trumbles?

Posted: Sun Jun 27, 2010 6:32 pm
by DaddyHoggy
I like "A plague of Trumbles".

Posted: Mon Jun 28, 2010 8:48 am
by ZygoUgo
Ah well, plague did cross my mind, but I thought it might be a bit dark for Oolite, I considered a draught of trumbles just to relate them to the effect they would cause but again there's nothing amusing about it.
I rather liked 'tumble' because thats how I imagine them moving in large clusters, falling over each other in a multicoloured surge to get to the food.
Surge is a good visual word too