[quote=ielle;#103354;1337712665]Ah no thanks. I'll just wait for the next EB.

I don't know too. Why don't you ask him/her?


ansaveh ko?

[/quote]
aw.. tsk sayang haha

ok its up to you

who's him? why him? dafuq

hahaha

[quote=llyanz;#103355;1337712679]fak you , they are shiz

they're taking a good sleep while I'm cramming xd . They're sucks

you pertaining to me?

[/quote]
hahaha

your such a nice classmate to them

hays,i hope they will not depend on you all the time

[quote=llyanz;#103355;1337712679]what does OK actually mean?
why is it called a "building" when it is already built?
what's do you like best about yourself?
what's the best piece of advice you've ever received?[/quote]
- "Okay" (also spelled "OK," "O.K.") is a colloquial English word denoting approval, acceptance, agreement, assent, or acknowledgment. "Okay" has frequently turned up as a loanword in many other languages. As an adjective, "okay" means "adequate," "acceptable" ("this is okay to send out"), "mediocre" often in contrast to "good" ("the food was okay"); it also functions as an adverb in this sense. As an interjection, it can denote compliance ("Okay, I will do that"), or agreement ("Okay, that's good"). As a verb and noun it means "assent" ("The boss okayed the purchase," and, "The boss gave his okay to the purchase.") A versatile discourse marker (or back-channeling item), it can also be used with appropriate voice tone to show doubt or to seek confirmation ("Okaay?" or "Is that okay?").

- i dunno why they say its a building, maybe they get the idea to word 'built'

- what i like about myself is i can make people smile in a simple way

i dunno exactly..

- about advice, someone says, dont be so emotional or sensitive
Last edited by Natsume (2012-05-22 15:03:01)