- May 26, 2010
- 28,143
- 5
- 0
Dr. Maserati said:And why should anyone care about what you think?
well you obviously do
Dr. Maserati said:You call everything a spade.
i see you more a trowel kind of guy.
Dr. Maserati said:It didn't have a pulse when you brought it here.
but you are doing a great job in breeding some life into it. thanks.
sadly most pro racing posters dont like to venture out of the safety of the omerta breeding pro racing section so all your efforts are likely to be in 'vain'
Dr. Maserati said:No idea what that mean - but if you're stating a preference that I keep quiet then consider it ignored.
oh i doubt you are that stupid, but if you are..
Foam or Froth at the mouth
Display furious rage.
Origin
Dogs and other animals affected by rabies foam at the mouth. There are examples of forms of this phrase in Old and Middle English that date back to at least the first millennium. The Lindisfarne Gospels, 950 AD, have a reference to 'Spumat faeme'. The earliest version in a form that we can now readily understand is in Shakespeare's Julius Caesar, 1601:
" He [Caesar] fell down in the market-place, and foamed at mouth, and was speechless."