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Post by missrosie on Jul 28, 2008 16:35:45 GMT -5
DUDE! Whare the heck is everyone anymore??
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Post by The Dracolyte on Jul 28, 2008 18:04:44 GMT -5
I personally check Green Games everyday, just all I do is watch the slow but sure decline of the Green Games society with my pessimistic outlook, and read ancient Lounge threads of old that have long been forgotten by modern day society( thats society twice in one post ). but I respond to anything I find interesting, it's just I don't start many threads because I don't want to making meaningless contributions that will just end up being neglected by the community at large. P.S. Aren't Monkeys awesome?!?!?!
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Post by missrosie on Jul 29, 2008 20:29:38 GMT -5
Humm..... Well if more people than just you and I were checking green games at least twice a week it wouldn't be on the decline... (Ok so it kind of died, but I'm in denial and I'm seeing what I can do to revive it). I don't have much I could add to the game threads but I do have a lot of random stuff I can put elsewhere that people can put their two cents into... Anywho, ... Monkeys?
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Post by Happy Camper on Jul 31, 2008 0:00:13 GMT -5
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MonkeyA monkey is any member of either the New World monkeys or Old World monkeys, two of the three groupings of simian primates, the third group being the apes. There are 264 known extant species of monkey. The New World monkeys are classified within the parvorder Platyrrhini, whereas the Old World monkeys (superfamily Cercopithecoidea) form part of the parvorder Catarrhini, which also includes the apes. Thus, scientifically speaking, monkeys are paraphyletic (not a single coherent group), and Old World monkeys are actually more closely related to the apes than they are to the New World monkeys. Because of their similarity to monkeys, apes such as chimpanzees and gibbons are often called "monkeys" in informal usage, though they are not monkeys. Conversely, due to its size (up to 1 m/3 ft) the Mandrill is often thought to be an ape, but it is actually an Old World monkey. Also, a few monkey species have the word "ape" in their common name.
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Post by Dragondrake on Jun 18, 2009 1:53:00 GMT -5
Well, that's definitely a simple question, but not much of a simple answer. So here's more simple questions to be answered:
Society? Pessimistic outlook? Denial?
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