Capt. Scott wrote:Dear .9 decibel dickhead,
I use that pa EACH AND EVERY time we play..and I like it.
I told you I use it for vocals only and it does very well.
I even get a lot of questions about CCR and the way they used them, etc.
It's gitchy! You know, not like you and your sister.
If you don't like it, that's fine.
If you do, that's fine.
In short no matter what your tiny brain thinks, that's fine because I don't care what you think.
You talk like a little bitch and you complain because you think you might get your ass handed to ya?
On the outside, might makes right and unless you live with a cop you need to realize not everyone is going to want to put up with your mouth.
You can talk all the sh*t you want, but do not complain when you get the sh*t beat out of you by someone that can reach your moth ball smelling ass.
It goes without saying that if you want to vacation up here, I'll put you up in my home just so I can kick the sh*t out of you. After, I'll even take you to the hospital.
And don't complain about my verbal bile, you just can't speak well and that's why you can't contend. You need to read more and build a vernacular instead of being drunk and beating your sister or wife.
You give hill billies a bad name, Mr Holiday Inn. Go sober up and go find someone else to pester. Maybe I can come on down to your next gig, you'd really sh*t your pants in a hurry..
Otherwise if all you want to do is complain, I have some music I am going to release HERE shortly. You can complain all you want about that once I upload it to this site.
That's all you have? More threats of physical violence?
You are going to 'beat the s*it' out of me. Then you're going to 'kick the s*it' out of me. You're going to put me in the hospital.
Why? Because I exposed you as a total poser fraud to all your little cyberfriends?
As for me building a 'vernacular', I would suggest that you build a
vocabulary, Professor Poser. There is a difference, you know.
ver·nac·u·lar [ver-nak-yuh-ler, vuh-nak-] Show IPA
–adjective
1.
(of language) native or indigenous ( opposed to literary or learned).
2.
expressed or written in the native language of a place, as literary works: a vernacular poem.
3.
using such a language: a vernacular speaker.
4.
of or pertaining to such a language.
5.
using plain, everyday, ordinary language.
6.
of, pertaining to, or characteristic of architectural vernacular.
7.
noting or pertaining to the common name for a plant or animal.
8.
Obsolete . (of a disease) endemic.
–noun
9.
the native speech or language of a place.
10.
the language or vocabulary peculiar to a class or profession.
11.
a vernacular word or expression.
12.
the plain variety of language in everyday use by ordinary people.
13.
the common name of an animal or plant as distinguished from its Latin scientific name.
14.
a style of architecture exemplifying the commonest techniques, decorative features, and materials of a particular historical period, region, or group of people.
15.
any medium or mode of expression that reflects popular taste or indigenous styles.
vo·cab·u·lar·y [voh-kab-yuh-ler-ee] Show IPA
–noun, plural -lar·ies.
1.
the stock of words used by or known to a particular people or group of persons: His french vocabulary is rather limited. The scientific vocabulary is constantly growing.
2.
a list or collection of the words or phrases of a language, technical field, etc., usually arranged in alphabetical order and defined: Study the vocabulary in the fourth chapter.
3.
the words of a language.
4.
any collection of signs or symbols constituting a means or system of nonverbal communication: vocabulary of a computer.
5.
any more or less specific group of forms characteristic of an artist, a style of art, architecture, or the like.