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What's your favorite line from a movie ?

GOOD MORNIN' VIETNAAAAMM
Robyn Williams from the eponymous movie
I wouldn't quite go as far as to call that movie eponymous bunyio. Epibrious perhaps, but never been eponymous. Never ever.
Hm, @sikkemur3 and @bunyip
My computer doesn't seem to know the word Epibrious . now that is not to say that it is not a word as such, I will check in the shorter Oxford dictionary and if necessary I think my father-in-law has a copy of the longer one, which means I can get a definitive last word if needs be.
However, language is a fluid medeum and what you say in your post #82 may well be 'dope tea' as the young people say these days.
@chessspy1 you have made the assumption that heaven only refers to after death. You also missed the entire point of the quote. Good luck with your trolling efforts in the future.
@OneDummHikk : you have made the assumption that @chessspy1 made the assumption that heaven only refers to after death. You missed the entire point of HIS quote. Good luck with your countertrolling efforts in the future

Apologies for the rudeness, but yet again, copying the sentence structure is useful for rhetorical emphasis.
@OneDummHikk
Trolling? Moi. I think not.
I was quoting Lennon not Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov
I did not "miss the point". Heaven is generally taken to mean that place above (if indeed there is such a place) I do know that the word 'heaven' can be taken to mean a blissful state here on earth as in, "I'm in heaven' etc much used in popular songs and literature of the common sort.
If you do not like my posts please feel free not to read them.
Weak unfounded criticism is not really good enough.
Another movie quote:

"I came here to kick ass and chew bubble gum. And I'm all out of bubble gum!"
I think the quote is, (from my post #34)
" I came here to chew bubblegum and kick ass, and i'm all out of bubblegum"
Just saying @Raspberry_yoghurt

Also,
It is generally agreed among historians that yogurt and other fermented milk products were discovered accidentally as a result of milk being stored by primitive methods in warm climates. Most historical accounts attribute yogurt to the Neolithic peoples of Central Asia around 6000 B.C..

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