arlecchin profile picture

arlecchin

About Me


toi, qui vois mon coeur éperdu.
père du jour, ô soleil, ô mon père!
je ne veux plus d'un bien, que Castor a perdu,
et je renonce à ta lumière.

My Interests

I'd like to meet:

this adorable child.

My Blog

If I dont know you, I will not be your "friend"

I am not here to meet "new people" or to find a date. Unless I know you outside the confines of a computer screen, I am not inclined to add you as a friend. It's nothing personal. Wishing you a h...
Posted by on Sat, 21 Jun 2008 17:48:00 GMT

For a fat ass, Molly sure has a hot husband

I would know, because we flew back on the same wonderful red-eye from Sacramento to JFK.And I feel bad about my chosen title. It's probably just her pregnancy weight. Plus, she's still fucking adorabl...
Posted by on Tue, 27 Nov 2007 09:27:00 GMT

I thought it might’ve been an Olsen twin

It could be... so nice.It wasn't (duh).It was Vincent Gallo instead.Maybe you say the dark grey facial hair should've been a dead give-away. But, really, it's easy to confuse them. With similarities l...
Posted by on Mon, 22 Oct 2007 17:35:00 GMT

Persians are hot, and I'm getting in touch with my roots.

Persian rock, Persian style.This really makes me nostalgic for the mother land and her rich culture.EddeaaBooss(Kiss, in Farsi)She!r!n(Sweet, in Farsi)Oh, and post script, let's send out "yek merci-ye...
Posted by on Mon, 05 Mar 2007 10:20:00 GMT

A Brief Etymological Discussion of Forever

NB: This was in response to a friend's inquiry into this very curious word. Please note that this is a preliminary draft.Dear S,I need eight synonyms for "forever." Where did this word come from? What...
Posted by on Mon, 31 Jul 2006 23:50:00 GMT

The Integration of Greek and Latin Influences in 'Sycopate'

Dear Mr. Torres, Remember our discussion about the etymology of "syncopate"? I had originally said that it came from Latin, and that the stem of the word, "cop-" meant "to cut." But then I revised ...
Posted by on Thu, 05 Jan 2006 00:46:00 GMT

A Brief Glance at Greek Etymology, and Its Relation to Two Literary Terms

Dear Mr. Zee, Sorry I didn't have time to complete our discussion regarding the etymologies of 'exegesis' and 'diegesis' yesterday. But after a couple minutes of focused study, I would like to shar...
Posted by on Wed, 21 Dec 2005 11:57:00 GMT