Big Nate by Lincoln Peirce for July 06, 1998
Transcript:
Nate's Dad: Hi, Nate! how was the game? Nate Wright: Terrible Nate: We were ahead by ten run, but did we win? No! The other team just kept scoring until, finally, they beat us! Nate's Dad: Sounds like " Joe's Chicken" really knows how to ... hee hee... fritter away a lead! Nate's Dad: "Fritter" ha ha... get it? Nate: Et tu, brute!
kenivlikesbignate almost 12 years ago
it translated from french and it said gross and you
sg12345 almost 12 years ago
No it actually means"You to Brutus". It was Caesars’s Last words. His dissenters rebelled and his friend was among the ones that asssinated him.
mrfsu7524 almost 11 years ago
It means, no lie, and you, brutus.
maxpat over 8 years ago
haha funny comments.
It really means “You too, Brutus!”, reference to the last words Caesar allegedly told his friend Brutus, whom he considered like a son/protégé, when he discovered he was part of the plot to assassinate him. It really comes in fact from Shakespeare’s play “Julius Caesar”, and it’s doubtful he ever said that in real life.
SamuelRookstool about 6 years ago
This is implying that Nate has read a Shakespeare play. Now that’s just plain wrong.
Thunderbolt Boss about 4 years ago
Isn’t “Et tu, Brute?” a question?
RG33 almost 3 years ago
Shut UP, man.
nintendopoptarts64 almost 2 years ago
Shut up, Martin. Your not helping
-unbound- 6 months ago
Hi