He must’ve ended a sentence with a preposition at the Bee.
He can only hope that the next word is suspended and has nothing to do with hanging.
A decade behind bars…that’s quite a sentence…
You’ll be barred till you decay, Ed.
If he were locked in a cell for a decade and forgotten, he’d be decayed also.
It’s a different kind of bee. One where he’ll be in jail for a spell.
sentence overturned… I before e except after c disproved by science
He can only see “what he did there” because of the comic dialogue bubble.
Instead of a number does he get a misspelled word on his prison uniform?
Similar take on incomplete info:
“Doc, how much time do I have?”
“10”
“10 what?”
“9 … 8 … 7 … 6 …”
This is GREAT!!!
What comes at the end of a sentence? Post prison supervision.
At the end of the sentence is a probation period.
Seems awfully informal wording for a judge.
Bilan about 6 years ago
He must’ve ended a sentence with a preposition at the Bee.
the lost wizard about 6 years ago
He can only hope that the next word is suspended and has nothing to do with hanging.
PICTO about 6 years ago
A decade behind bars…that’s quite a sentence…
Jeddo about 6 years ago
You’ll be barred till you decay, Ed.
Egrayjames about 6 years ago
If he were locked in a cell for a decade and forgotten, he’d be decayed also.
uniquename about 6 years ago
It’s a different kind of bee. One where he’ll be in jail for a spell.
Chief Inspector about 6 years ago
sentence overturned… I before e except after c disproved by science
joe piglet Premium Member about 6 years ago
He can only see “what he did there” because of the comic dialogue bubble.
waltermgm about 6 years ago
Instead of a number does he get a misspelled word on his prison uniform?
Richard S Russell Premium Member about 6 years ago
Similar take on incomplete info:
“Doc, how much time do I have?”
“10”
“10 what?”
“9 … 8 … 7 … 6 …”
Diamond Lil about 6 years ago
This is GREAT!!!
Lablubber about 6 years ago
What comes at the end of a sentence? Post prison supervision.
Coyoty Premium Member about 6 years ago
At the end of the sentence is a probation period.
Stephen Gilberg about 6 years ago
Seems awfully informal wording for a judge.