Topic: Contribute
Larrys1000's photo
Thu 11/01/12 12:31 PM
A man that train a woman as train the world or globe?,yes/no

italianman4u's photo
Thu 11/01/12 12:39 PM
wtf? seriously?

SimplicityAtItsBest's photo
Thu 11/01/12 12:41 PM
I'm sorry, this is too deep for me.
So deep, I'm confused.
spock

USmale47374's photo
Thu 11/01/12 01:20 PM
I wasn't aware that was possible. laugh

willing2's photo
Thu 11/01/12 02:07 PM
I knew a gal whose nick-name was train. She pulled a lot of 'em.

jacktrades's photo
Thu 11/01/12 02:25 PM
One of the best things about this site is people from around the globe have input here. Please rephrase your question so I can understand what you mean. Thank you

kc0003's photo
Thu 11/01/12 04:04 PM
i trained my dog. does that count?

Kaleijoscope's photo
Thu 11/01/12 04:21 PM
me thinks...
it's the other way around....
(kalei put her shields on and awaits the other gender's outpour)

wux's photo
Fri 11/02/12 05:54 PM
OP, I get you, I think.

You are making a pun, on "training a dog / man / woman", and training, as in putting down railway tracks and running a train on it.

This was a good pun, if you are new to the English language. It shows courage, a sense of feeling the language for its shortcomings, and an ability to transplant all that into a verbally described visual.

Plus, "trainign a woman by a man like railroads train the world" can mean his tongue or fingers rattling along her skin, pulling pleasure and filling her with static and electricity, all around or in straight lines, from station to station; or else it could mean a length of rough hemp rope that embraces a woman's naked, sensitive flesh and keeps her painfully immobile for the duration of the training session, like railroad tracks keep the world together and from falling apart as if by a loosely knitted net.

I like your simile. You ought to be a poet.

wux's photo
Fri 11/02/12 05:57 PM

A man that train a woman as train the world or globe?,yes/no


Oh, and please don't forget that most poets are misunderstood. I understood your simile, maybe, correctly, maybe, but there are tons of poets nobody understands, like T.S. Elliott or like Suburghana Trumngdai, who wrote very, very beautiful poetry in a language which was spoken by a tribe that was later annihilated by the Niger Child Warriors, so nobody can understand the poems. Because there is none left in the world to know that language from Cryptic puzzles.