as a newbie

grasoo

New member
Hello I am a conservative Christian.
mainly been grown up in presbyterian tradition
I believe trinitarian God; Father, Son and Spirit.
I hope to have a good time here and be challenged.

Jesus loves you, most of all.
 

Samstarrett

New member
Greetings and salutations, friend.

ἡ χάρις τοῦ κυρίου Ἰησοῦ μεθ' σου.

(May the grace of the Lord Jesus be with you).

:e4e:
 

bybee

New member
Hello I am a conservative Christian.
mainly been grown up in presbyterian tradition
I believe trinitarian God; Father, Son and Spirit.
I hope to have a good time here and be challenged.

Jesus loves you, most of all.

Welcome.
 

Town Heretic

Out of Order
Hall of Fame
Hello I am a conservative Christian.
Well, it's encouraging that you don't conflate the two anyway. :D

mainly been grown up in presbyterian tradition
Do you know the joke about the Presbyterian minister who fell off the ladder and broke his leg?

He said, "Thank God that's over with."

That probably kills down at the Applebee's.

I believe trinitarian God; Father, Son and Spirit.
I hope to have a good time here and be challenged.
Well, at least one of those is bound to happen. :thumb:

Jesus loves you, most of all.
Glad to see you aren't bitter about that, but keep it under your hat, willya? Stripe is jealous enough as it is. :plain:

Welcome! :e4e:
 

grasoo

New member
grasoo is a phrase that "Did you (really) do this?"(negative meaning) with a provincial accent in Korean. e.g. 그랬쑤? - [phonic] grae-tsu
 

grasoo

New member
Thanks Dena. I just lost my longer version of reply for your question, so I will give you a simple answer. grasoo was my nickname in high school, because my Korean name 'Jungsoo' has a same rhyme with it. I liked its accent and euphony, and that is why I have been using it. Pronoucing it with a Korean accent, it would be pronounced as /g`rat`θu↗?/
 

Stripe

Teenage Adaptive Ninja Turtle
LIFETIME MEMBER
Hall of Fame
Thanks Dena. I just lost my longer version of reply for your question, so I will give you a simple answer. grasoo was my nickname in high school, because my Korean name 'Jungsoo' has a same rhyme with it. I liked its accent and euphony, and that is why I have been using it. Pronoucing it with a Korean accent, it would be pronounced as /g`rat`θu↗?/
You're KOREAN!?!

This means war!

An yong ha say you. :D
 

Krsto

Well-known member
Thanks Dena. I just lost my longer version of reply for your question, so I will give you a simple answer. grasoo was my nickname in high school, because my Korean name 'Jungsoo' has a same rhyme with it. I liked its accent and euphony, and that is why I have been using it. Pronoucing it with a Korean accent, it would be pronounced as /g`rat`θu↗?/

Whoah, that sounds like a real tongue twister, worse than the Russian greeting zdravtsvuitcha. Can I just call you G?

I got my name from an atheist Yugoslavian exchange student we had in our home before we had kids. It means red cross in Serbo-Croatian.

Looks like you might have brought along some Sacred Cows on your journey. I don't know about you, but WE are going to have fun kicking them around a bit. :deadhorse:
 
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