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rugby>>>amerikan football (rugby)

Name: Anonymous 2007-10-11 9:18

true

Name: Anonymous 2007-10-14 17:17

soccer > all <3

Name: paste 2007-11-03 13:17

rugby >>> hockey >>> football >>> everything else (besides soccer) >>> soccer

Name: Anonymous 2007-11-03 16:15

american football >>>> ice hockey >>>>> baseball  >>> futbol >>>>>basketball >>>>> rugby

Name: Anonymous 2007-11-03 19:08

>>1
true

Name: Anonymous 2007-11-03 19:47

soccersoccersoccer

shove it, eurofag

Name: Anonymous 2007-11-04 4:21

>>7
only amerifaggots call it soccer
rest of the world agree FOOTBALL
YOUR SHITTY SPORT DONT HAVE A NAME ITS A VARIATION OF RUGBY WITH AMERIKAN RULES
THREREFORE:
AMERIKAN RUGBY

Name: Anonymous 2007-12-02 6:32

Get your own fucking language.

Name: Anonymous 2007-12-02 9:26

Those who can't play baseball are all faggots. Period.

Name: Anonymous 2007-12-02 11:23

Those who think baseball is a good sport are all faggots.  Period.

Name: Anonymous 2007-12-03 0:49

only amerifaggots call it soccer
rest of the world agree FOOTBALL
YOUR SHITTY SPORT DONT HAVE A NAME ITS A VARIATION OF RUGBY WITH AMERIKAN RULES
THREREFORE:
AMERIKAN RUGBY

Name: Anonymous 2007-12-03 12:01

"Wine is a mocker, strong drink is raging: and whosoever is deceived thereby is not wise. Bread of deceit is sweet to a man; but afterwards his mouth shall be filled with gravel." - Proverb 20:1,17

Some people are so in love with alcoholic and intoxicating beverages that they refuse to see that the word "wine" can refer to anything else than what gets them drunk. There are many who justify the consumption of alcoholic beverages by falsely saying that Jesus drank it. They point to Jesus turning water into "wine" at Cana, the good Samaritan using "wine" in the parable, the Pharisee's accusation towards Jesus of being a "winebibber", and the "fruit of the vine" at the Last Supper.

The word "wine" in olden times was used indiscriminately to mean either fresh grape juice or fermented (alcoholic) grape juice. The context in which the word is used tells the reader which meaning is appropriate. If it speaks negatively about it, it is referring to alcoholic wine. If it speaks positively about it, it is referring to unfermented grape juice. Don't believe me about the word wine? Look in any English dictionary over 200 years old and you'll see the word wine used to mean any grape juice.

In the Old Testament there are two Hebrew words that are commonly translated as "wine": yayin (יין) which is alcoholic wine and tirosh (תירוש) which is fresh unfermented grape juice. The Greek words in the New Testament that are most commonly translated as "wine" are oinos (οίνος) and gleukos (γλευκος) which can refer to either alcoholic wine (yayin) or unfermented grape juice (tirosh). There are other words for different types of grape juice that are all translated as "wine" in the Bible.

Many have said grape juice was fermented to preserve it. There were many methods in Biblical times besides fermentation to preserve grape juice and even when it was fermented the alcohol content was much less than the wines of today. The high alcohol content in today's wines comes from added sugar and yeast. Also, fermentation isn't as natural as some would like to think, the indispensable conditions for vinous fermentation are exact proportions of sugar, yeast or gluten and water with air temperature between 50 and 75 degrees.

Also, I'm sick of hearing that "(alcoholic) wine consumption is a part of Christian and Jewish tradition and was done on a regular basis". Back then unless you lived by a vineyard, only the rich could afford "wine", and even then that "wine" could have been non-alcoholic.

Name: Anonymous 2007-12-03 20:54

rugby<REAL football eurofags

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