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Soap Opera

Most of us know where the ’soap’ comes from in “Soap Opera”… but how about the ‘opera’ part?

Sorry.. had to repost this.. something messed up in the previus post and I lost about 140 comments.

Arrgghh! Such is life… sorry :-(

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176 Comments and 32 threads

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  1. rijk says: 107

    Thought soap was named after the first one, but the thirst one then was called after the sponsor, lesson learned
    cliff-hanger right?

  2. Personally I really like horse opera better. :grin: :lol: ;-)

  3. leonard says: 105

    suspense [tease] temptation :lol: random

  4. stokesjrj1 says: 104

    suspensefull ending little “orange blossom special”

  5. leonard says: 103

    random lesson—http://ca.youtube.com/watch?v=c3coSfks4rQ

  6. stokesjrj1 says: 102

    Soap Opera, I am unable to post comments there

    Hi Marina, Dearest of all my teachers,

    I believe the word your looking for is cliffhanger. Seems I have a lot of catching up to do since working away from home all last week, has gotten me behind on the lessons.
    Beautiful necklace by the way I love how it nestles amongst the hollow, makes me envious. Have two new word requests “grammatolatry” and “ogallala”.

    A voice! A voice! I hear which does set my heart a flutter.
    An explosion of heaven within my mind which permeates a burning into the very flesh of my being.
    Truly this woman is bone of my bone, flesh of my flesh, otherwise it could not be,
    for this reason alone I claim her my own , Marina for all eternity.

    Hope You Like It
    Somebody in Texas Loves You

  7. stokesjrj1 says: 101

    RE: Soap Opera, I am unable to post comments there

    Hi Marina, Dearest of all my teachers,

    I believe the word your looking for is cliffhanger. Seems I have a lot of catching up to do since working away from home all last week, has gotten me behind on the lessons.
    Beautiful necklace by the way I love how it nestles amongst the hollow, makes me envious. Have two new word requests “grammatolatry” and “ogallala”.

    A voice! A voice! I hear which does set my heart a flutter.
    An explosion of heaven within my mind which permeates a burning into the very flesh of my being.
    Truly this woman is bone of my bone, flesh of my flesh, otherwise it could not be,
    for this reason alone I claim her my own , Marina for all eternity.

    Hope You Like It
    Somebody in Texas Loves You

  8. Horse walks into a bar, and the bartender says, “hey buddy, why the long face?”

  9. cesdavis says: 98

    I like your shirt if I had a favorite color and my key chain that you are using for a necklace. I am still waiting for the next date and unfortunately I had to push my car seventeen miles home after the last date? I would have to say it was all pleasure! :smile: & :smile:

  10. wordlover says: 97

    Привет, Marina! I am the first to say that you are beautiful, that the answer is Cliffhanger, and that “supercalafragelisticexpialadociously” is as much a word as “supercalafragelisticexpialadocious”!

    (Please forgive my sarcasm! :cry: )

    Oh, and please do one on the word “sarcasm”! Thanks you! :wink:

    • Marina, also could you do a video on superschitzophrenicexpialodocious? I have it!!! It’s a rare chemical balance that is only caused by me not watching your funny, witty, and extremely sexy videos!!! lol jk I don’t have that, but I do like to watch your videos!!!

  11. rei says: 96

    I am in love with this woman! :neutral:

  12. d04105641 says: 95

    ‘cliffhanger’? Bah! The technique is known as titilation.

  13. dr. who says: 94

    Thank you, Marina!
    You are in the top three of all my teachers, just after teacher of math.
    “What method soap operas using to captivate their viewers?”
    I believe this method is “fake marriage shoe”. As long as you get used to it, this marriage keep changing the shoe colors by faking it.

    Cheers!

  14. skyrider777 says: 93

    I would be in a soap opera with you any tin, hold on, gotta get the water hose, your so hot my pc is smoking. :) :cool:

  15. zabriel says: 92

    Interestingly enough most soap operas today are in fact sponsored by Proctor and Gamble, which makes and owns many things, including soap lines, toothpaste, and Pringles.

  16. And the SAGA continues………………lol

  17. master1228 says: 90

    Soap Operas use a technique called a Cliffhanger to get people to tune in for their next show the next day.

  18. billybobtn says: 89

    the answer to the followon question of “what is the word for the dramatic ending that leaves the watchers waiting for the next episode?” The answer is “cliffhanger”

  19. g g says: 88

    Marina,

    Word Request: Bandwagon, as in, relating to sports, “bandwagon fan.”

  20. Marina,

    A guess from out of left feild
    infomercial = [sophisticated-witty-underestated-documentry program-interveiw] (1)

    Gregory McBride

  21. trash man says: 86

    the soap in soap opera comes from the sponsors of soap opera programs – with many commercials about laundtry detergents, dish soap, etc……

  22. beerslammer says: 85

    I’d like to request the word “Pub Crawl”

    Oh and if you’d say hi to the “Thirsty Swagman” (from thirstyswagman.com) while you’re giving the lesson, I would be honored!

  23. swedehunter says: 84

    That was an easy lesson, but mostly because we use the same words in swedish….. “cliffhanger”. Not that it´s in any way swedish words, but we tend to loan words from different language and use at home.
    I´ll get back to you with the word yuletide sometime in december!

    from your dear student / Swedehunter

  24. Marina,

    First off, I wanted to tell you that you’re absolutely stunning……..

    The word I’m curious about is invalid, and by invalid, I mean a sick person. Where did that come from?

  25. markus74 says: 82

    marina, what do I need to do to become teachers pet for the day?!

  26. gramps525 says: 81

    :mrgreen: PS: i think IVORY SOAP was the first to sponsor the daytime shows :roll:

  27. gramps525 says: 80

    :mrgreen: i think cliffhanger is it.your still hot :mrgreen:

  28. Marina,

    I heard this word several times in the movie “Street Kings” recently. If you dare, what is the meaning of “exigent circumstance.”

    Best,

    JW

  29. huntanpeck says: 78

    Hi Marina;
    I really love your videos! If all my teachers had been as beautiful and interesting as you are, then I likely would’ve been a much better student.

    Can you find out for me how the term ’sucks’ came to be used to describe something negative or unpleasant? e.g.; “it really sucks that I broke my leg before the dance tonight.” When did that term enter general usage, and what expression was used before it?

    I recall when the word in that context was considered obscene (I still think it’s a bit vulgar), but it became so mainstream that sometimes even I catch myself using it. I would be grateful for any help you can give at all toward ending my perplexity.

    Sincerely, your ever attentive student,
    Huntan Peck

    • Huntanpeck,

      “sucks” means what you think it means… it is vulgar…. it came into common use by kids who did not know what it really means (but they heard it used by adults alot who knew what it meant) and now you cannot convince the young ones what it means, which is: “that sucks the ‘big one’”

  30. Thanks :wink: , a nice lesson ,is the technic called ‘foreshadowing’ :?: .

  31. Always enjoy hearing from your sister. I’m surprised she didn’t point out that soap operas began on radio and were carried over to TV. I think “The Guiding Light” is the last surviving carryover.

  32. natepm05 says: 75

    word request: Vicarious

  33. satiety says: 74

    Hiya! I was wondering if I could make a request for the origin of the word “Phenylalanine”. It was something that me and my best friend were making fun off because it was funny to say it. Haha, and also, great videos as always! Keep it up :mrgreen:

  34. talljohnny says: 73

    Hi Marina,
    Was just enjoying several of your lessons. I know you did “mischief” awhile back. I am curious about the frequent mispronunciation of the word “mischievous”, where the speaker says, “misscheeveeous”. It seems that people usually shorten a word when they pronounce it wrong, but in this case, a syllable is added that doesn’t seem to be there.
    Hope you grab this one!
    Thanks, TJ

  35. hotforhfw says: 72

    Awww man! You lost my post? But I was the second poster and the first to say, “cliffhanger.” Oh well. :)

  36. irocky says: 71

    The ending to a Soap Opera episode is a “Cliff Hanger.”

  37. denisv says: 70

    Hi Marina,

    I’m wondering if anyone has ever asked you to find the origin of the word – “Word” ?? ;)

    The other thing I wanted to mention was have you ever thought of researching the reason why the sounds of words are what they are? i.e. “Word” is the sound for the word – “Word”, “One” is the sound for the number “1″, why is it “one” and not “woo” or “wa”?

  38. kwirl says: 69

    So I did some quick searching for the origin of the word “rendezvous” and didn’t find a very interesting background. Think you know something that would spice up the story of the word?

  39. I think the technique in a soap opera is called a tag, or its suspence, I’m not sure.

  40. Hey, Marina I’ve been wondering what the origin for fornicate is. It’s sexy the way so say HOT for words

  41. roadrunrnch says: 66

    LOSE SOCCER!

    HOW ABOUT COMMUNISM? People here in the US think this would be a good thing, Here. Any of Your own thoughts.

    In theory , It looks good

    In Practice , Deadly.

  42. kwirl says: 65

    Dude, shut up about it. Back in the old days before it was ’soccer’ they had football associations to differentiate themselves from rugby football. They used the abbreviated ‘assoc’ which became just ’soc’ for association, thus people who played were called ’soccers’

  43. kwirl says: 64

    While it isn’t a request for a particular word, per se, my question is what is your favorite english word with an origin in the russian language, and how did we come to adopt it? (i don’t think vodka counts, but god bless you for it)

  44. I dig it! I dug it! I want some mo’ uvvit!

    Why do they not call a “w” a “double ‘v’”?

  45. I think this legitimate financial term might generate more views than “naked” and it is very topical, considering the price of gas.

    What is the origin of the phrase “crack spread”? :mrgreen:

    • kwirl says: 62.1

      In the oil industry and futures trading, the crack spread is the differential between the price of crude oil and petroleum products extracted from it; in other words, it is the profit margin that an oil refinery can expect to make by extracting other products from oil. In chemistry, to “crack” means to separate the component parts of a substance; in this case, the “cracking” of hydrocarbon chains. A refinery “cracks” the long-chain hydrocarbons found in crude oil into shorter-chain hydrocarbons that make up the useful petroleum products.

      In the futures markets, the “crack spread” is a specific spread trade involving simultaneously buying and selling contracts in crude oil and one or more derivative products, typically gasoline and heating oil. Oil refineries may trade a crack spread to hedge the price risk of their operations, while speculators attempt to profit from a change in the oil/gasoline price differential.

  46. I would appreciate it if you could tell me where the phrase catch 22 comes from?

    • kwirl says: 61.1

      From the 1961 Joseph Heller Novel. The “catch” is that a bomber pilot is insane if he flies combat missions without asking to be relieved from duty, and is thus eligible to be relieved from duty. But if he asks to be relieved from duty, that means he’s sane and has to keep flying.

  47. mike29 says: 59

    Hi Marina,
    Could you please tell me the origin of the word euphemism as it is not in your list. Thank you. :grin:

  48. im with the dude below me, i wanna know where soccer comes from.

  49. jindai says: 57

    My dear teacher, I’m sorry to have to point this out, but your research didn’t go back far enough. First of all, the origin of “Soap Operas” did NOT start with television, as daytime Soaps were not around for many years after Television came on the scene. Most programming was only in the evenings. Daytime Soaps showed up much later, and long after all thought of a Horse Opera was a common occurance. However, RADIO soaps were extremely common through the late 30’s and aftewards. (Guiding Light being one of the first, and started in January, 1937 on radio, and transfering to Television when that was feasible.) Radio was around at the time silent westerns, or horse operas were, and that is where the phrase transfered from, stage to radio, to small screen.
    Oh, and most serials, as they are also known, ended in a cliffhanger, to induce one to tune in for the next episode.

    • kwirl says: 57.1

      She said television since most of her listeners are either not old enough to remember radio operas, or not asinine enough to dredge it up. Regardless, her etymological explanation holds up. Your counter is simply a well researched ploy for attention. Thumbs up.

      • jindai says: 57.1.1

        Thank you Kwirl. Though you characterize it as a ploy for attention, I appreciate your comments nonetheless. The fact is, however, Marina is a serious etymologist, and as such, does not stop her research at a point that most connects with her audience. She find the true root and then brings it to us. In this case, I think she fell a little short, is all. And if you are at all interested, I found an interesting history of soap opera on the web, it does not explain the “opera” part very well, but it goes into the history of radio serials, starting in 1930, and onward to television. I don’t know if you can place links here, so I’ll not do that now, but I googled “First radio soap opera” and it was the first link there (with museum in the address)

    • jindai,

      There’s really no need to open with an apology. Obviously, some people are bound to interpret it as condescension.

      Just say what you think, everyone else does. You have every right; that’s what this place is for… I’m sure Marina appreciates it.

      Your apology seems to have become an invitation for pseudo-analysis by someone who is transparently looking to invalidate your observations in order to usurp whatever consideration they merit. Your point is well made, not asinine. Kudos.

      • jindai says: 57.2.1

        Pennsyltucky9,
        Thanks. I was raised with sensabilities and manners that predate blogs and comments, so I tend to apologize prior to what might be perceived as a slight. (As opposed to an apology for being right.) I can see that that is seen as a weakness in the blog community, so I’ll heed your advice and not do that in the future, despite my instincts. :???:
        Thanks again, and have a great one.

      • I, too, have an overpoliteness tendency. :sad:
        But if people have a problem with it: TOO BAD! :wink: :wink: :wink:

  50. doctor mac says: 56

    Can’t think of anything other than cliffhanger. And how about “hunky dory”? I have no idea where those otherwise meaningless words came from.

  51. Hi Marina,

    I was wondering if you could find the origin of the word “Hobo”.

    Thank you so much!

    - YeaIAmTheAwesomeness

  52. What about “great” like… “Great grandmother”

  53. What about the prefix, “pro-”? I know it’s like, “the best”, but what about “protect”, or even “prohibit”? So yeah. o:3

  54. alexk238 says: 52

    Hi Marina, could you please do a lesson on suffixes, such as “ian”, “ist”, “esque”, “en”, “ify”, “ous”, “ism” ? What is the root of these specific suffixes? (there are so many suffixes, so I only wanted to ask about a few)

    Thanks :smile:

  55. lord inspar says: 51

    Dear Teacher,

    Marina, I have a word for you that I would like to know more about. The word is “ARCANE”. If you could educate me on the word I’d appreciate it. Thanks! :wink:

  56. jamiehayes says: 50

    Sometimes I need to say “my sister is an otorhinolaryngologist”. But no one has got what I said so far, if you would be so bold as to investigate, i have fun watching you try to pronouce this one, hehe, if you do, goodluck, you’ll need it :shock:

  57. skilz says: 49

    Hi Marina, I just found your movies, AND I LOVE IT. I hope my mom doesn’t think this iz p0rn. Anyways, my teacher is making me do a speech on the origin of the word MAYOR, as in the mayor of a town. Think you can help me out?

  58. kufel says: 48

    Marina maybe u can explain me
    what does mean

    LOVE

    :)

  59. good evening hot for words, a saying crossed my mind today. and i couldn,t help to think if anyone would know how this came to be. it would be you. well here goes, up the creek without a paddle , what do you think? well hope to hear from you on this one. i have some words, but i,ll send them to you another time. don’t want to put all my eggs in one basket. :grin: theres another one. well hope to hear from you and keep up the good work. later challenger666

  60. scrap_lokz says: 46

    please explain the words
    porch monkey

  61. zachary says: 45

    Teacher!
    Another great lesson. . . but i had an interesting word I would love for you to help me with.
    “Anonymous”
    and if u do phrases. . .Where in the world did the phrase
    “More than one way to skin a cat.” come from.?

    Thank you dear teacher!

    -Zach

  62. yost_112 says: 44

    Im kinda curious to know what the origin of the phrase “calling the kettle black” Thanks

    -Yost_112

  63. cimska says: 43

    Marina can you make out the origins of all those words or are you limited to just a few :?: I love your russian accent. what if you can do an entire show in russian to tease our vocabulary. . keep up the great work

  64. Heya

    I want to know the meaning of word BODOM and what is means by “children of bodom”

    luv
    ci

  65. 0wildbill0 says: 41

    Marina: (My favorite teacher)

    Since you are Russian, I have a word for you. The word is: Patronymic.
    I know what it means but I would like to know the origin and why Russia, which to my knowledge, is the primary country that does this. Are they the only country? If not, what others use this? And, where did it get started?

    I am looking forward to our next beautiful lesson.

    Bill

  66. juanmfraga says: 40

    Two Words: Procrastination and the phrase G-spot

    :twisted:

  67. dj-austin says: 39

    :!: can you do the word ‘Morbid’ :!:

    Thanks its just a strange word and can mean lots of things

  68. trgoblin says: 38

    Something funky is happenning… my first attempt to post this didn’t take…

    Anyway… what is the origin of the word G-Spot… and what does “G” stand for anyway?

    I’m not trying to be cute… some women were discussing this today, and I think it would make a killer lesson.

  69. trgoblin says: 37

    Okay Marina… I’m not trying to be cute here, but some women at the office were talking about this today, and no one seemed to know where it came from, so this is a serious word request.

    Where did the expression “G-Spot” come from and what does “G” stand for anyway?

    I’ll bet you can do a lot with this one! :twisted:

  70. billkarwin says: 36

    Why are words like “funner” and “funnest” not correct?

    Answer: “fun” was originally a noun, and later it became used as an adjective. “We had fun” was original, “this is a fun game” is a more recent usage.

    Other nouns that are used as adjectives follow the same rule. “Cherry” is a noun, but it can be used as an adjective, like “dude look at that cherry 1967 Mustang, it’s in flawless condition.” But you would not say one 1967 Mustang is “cherrier” than another, or that Jay Leno has the “cherriest” 1967 Mustang of all. Those would be wrong. Instead, say “more cherry” or “most cherry.”

  71. Hello Marina,
    I wanted to know where the word Yahoo originated(ok I already know),Thought it would be a good lesson .Thanks, bye

  72. cimska says: 34

    Marina do numbers and other words origins relate :?:

  73. virus101 says: 33

    :idea: marina, can you tell me where the word shoplifting came from and what does it have to do with lifting shops lol :?: :mrgreen: wow must be bad because you lost so mant comments :shock:

  74. ok before eveyone shouts at me for being obscene, this is a serious request, albeit kinda rude. I am actually genuinely interested in the history behind the word ‘masturbate’, i mean how did the words ‘mast’ and ‘bate’ come together to make the meaning that we know?

    teacher, please investigate! (see what i did there with the rhyming?…)

  75. karosun says: 31

    can you tell us what nigger means?

  76. Dear Teacher,
    Can you tell us about the word “Hope”

    Thankss :P
    xxxxoooxxxx

    (since my name is Hope i want to see where it came from)

  77. toysjoe says: 29

    AWWWWW that’s too bad.

    My post is gone :cry:

    But still, let me replace it

    Great lesson.

    Two lessons in one day? I am so lucky.

    Anyway, please upload and I would like to request

    Vice- as in bad things like gambling and alcohol. and also a title prefix like vice-president. And also a clamp.

    Why are dumbbells called that? What’s the dumb for?

  78. roadrunrnch says: 28

    TEACH, W AS A VOWEL :grin: ANOTHER ONE IS, CWM ; A STEEP VALLEY.

  79. hey marina i was wondering if you could figure out the origin of the number 23 and i do believe the answer is a cliffhanger thanks

  80. cimska says: 26

    :twisted: ….. don’t forget the color spectrum request
    :lol: ….. I feel so neglected
    :idea: this place needs work
    :oops: Ahoy Marina

  81. roadrunrnch says: 25

    MISOGYNIST, Not to You though. Any stories of your own :?:

  82. HI Marina,

    The word you’re looking for is “cliffhanger”.
    In the southern hemisphere they call the same thing “hingclaffer!”…
    or was hangcliffer… nope… hiffclinger… hmmm?!

    Cheers!
    Harv :mrgreen:

  83. :?: ok, i know that the vowels are a, e, i, o, and u. AND SOMETIMES W and Y. At least they used to teach that….schools aren’t so great anymore. And i know that there is at least one word in the dictionary using W as it’s ONLY vowel (crwth). Are there any others?

  84. bustchops says: 21

    Appalled where does this word come from?!?

  85. Hi,you were great as ususal!
    I was wondering if you could bring up the ord “Warlock”
    Thank you for your attention!
    Keep up the good work!

  86. the soap opreas used a technique called a “teaser” or “cliffhanger” (where you would tune in the next day to see if the heroine had “fallen off the cliff” or had been rescued.

  87. eyeopener says: 17

    Hi Marina,
    Can you explain where the word “DOG” comes from and when did one started to use this :?: I believe that in old times only the word “hound” was used.
    Waiting anxious for another Hot for Words episode.

    Love from ,
    EYEOPENER

  88. waxfingers says: 16

    So I was wondering where the word ‘hyper’ came from and how it relates to ‘hyperbole’

    Thanks for the fun education =p

  89. scotthorn says: 15

    Marina, I will try again and see if this word is worthy of your time.
    I just acquired one of these. It is a Baidarka.What does the word mean?
    Also a thought for you. Since you are such a popular teacher now and Van Halen is currently on tour you should get in touch with them and do a redo of their song and video [Hot For Teacher].
    Hot For Words! Hot For Teacher!!! All the best, Scotthorn :grin:

  90. beerboy23 says: 14

    It’s a cliffhanger that is at the end of every soap opera episode. And where did the word cliffhanger derive from anyway?

  91. forshais says: 13

    Ms. Marina

    A quick word(s) request. I have been interested in the English words “thee, thy, and thou”. I understand them to be “informal” like “ti’ is to Bbi in Russian. Is that correct? What is each word’s characteristic and how did English lose that Dynamic?

    • Dear fellow student,
      I’m really sorry: you certainly waited for our teacher to answer but if you really want to know…. and as she cannot answer to each of us….
      Thou, thy… are old forms of pronouns that do not exist anymore in english. These old pronouns were way to adress someone with familiarity. These kinds of pronouns still exist in other langages like german( du) , spanish (tu), french (tu) (and perhaps russian as you propose). Each form is a grammar case : subject, accusative or dative form (well, it is about the fonction of the word in the sentence). These old english forms were used during the middle ages and until the time of Shakespear and then they faded in the pages of history. Nowadays, as you surely know, they can only be found in the Bible.
      The origin is the german langage that was spoken by angle and saxon in the area called “Saxe” in germany.
      Amicalement
      A fellow student who just want to help,
      Don Felipe

      • Thanks, That is exactly what I thought but I wasn’t sure.
        Which leads perfectly into my question…Why did this happen?

        Help me out here, I’m guessing that:
        Thou = Nominative
        Thee = Accusative
        Thy = Genitive
        ? = Dative
        ? = Locative

        I speak Latvian and Russian and both those languages have a Formal and Informal form which make the languages much richer and better in many ways (in my opinion at least, and I’m an American)

        So Marina, why were these words lost? or is this too complex for a single lesson? (please, don’t let me down)

      • forshais, what is your native language?

  92. tigerking says: 12

    Cliffhanger :shock: Your video is entertaining and sexy, those big blue eyes! I especially enjoy it when you end with bloopers :lol: Way cool :cool:

  93. Please marina do the word hacker as a video :twisted: :evil: :twisted:

  94. rory6424 says: 10

    hi marina i was wondering were the word paradox cpmes from? if you get the chance please answer, keep up the great work :smile:

  95. rollipolioli says: 9

    yes, i would like to send 2 word requests, the words are: agoraphobia and claustrophobia. thank you very much :grin:

  96. geronimo says: 8

    Hey teach: I don’t know if you were able to see my response your response to me, so I will repeat. I agree that it would be tedious to define each word in a phrase, that’s why I suggested a different section for phrases. You probably don’t have time for that, but I think it would be great. Twice as much hot for words. :wink:

  97. hobbitgoth says: 7

    As I had posted before :roll: . Word request: Splendiferous, added to the Merriam-Webster Dictionary in 1843

    Noah Webster=Tres intelligent

    Привет Марина

  98. A Cliffhanger! (Do I get extra credit for doing the homework anyway?)

  99. okay4now says: 5

    ‘Stuff’ happens, deleted or lost is better than dismissed–when it comes to comments. Hope nobody is messing with your site, it was threatened by dude who needs 2 B _________(fill in blank).

    Party=YES! this site should always be a celebration of words etc…

  100. Nice job! And ah, in comes the sister. ;-)

    I would like to know the origin of the word ‘blaze.’

  101. nookman97 says: 3

    i think you should descuss lingerie..no perv..

  102. Dear teacher,
    I take a little time to write between two hard moments with young and horrible discipuli.
    I must confess I’m really happy to write my first comment on this lesson :wink:
    The lesson was, as usual, (hope you re not tired to read that) very interesting. Thank you.
    Don Felipe

  103. Marina says: 1

    Sorry everyone… lost about 143 comments there… had to delete the WHOLE POST Arghh!

    Hopefully we will fine again. I’ll make up for it.. no homework tonight! In fact.. let’s party!

Author: HotForWords