Dex-chan lover
- Joined
- Sep 17, 2025
- Messages
- 128
Thank you, Panda-senpaiIt's from a series called 'The Boondocks'.
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Thank you, Panda-senpaiIt's from a series called 'The Boondocks'.
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I'm going to have to find some.If you have the means, consider trying Saint Arnold's Root Beer.
Also in my top 5!Or if you're able to get to a Culver's, theirs is also really good and in my Top 5
🤔🤔🤔also you just narrowed down your location tenfold by calling soda "pop".
exactly this. and i'm fairly certain he's on Eastern time, which leaves us only a sliver of the yellow.
i swear soda was by far the more common of the two terms, with pop only being in a few areas
BanBan is in Detroit.
Yo yo yo it's all clicking together for me.BanBan is in Detroit.
i've also noticed that you occasionally use 'a' in front of a noun that begins with a vowel sound rather than 'an'. so i'd either call you a grammar chameleon or just slightly illiterate.
Clearly we need to ask the entire world (English second language included) because I call it "soda" tooi swear soda was by far the more common of the two terms, with pop only being in a few areas
guess i was hallucinating this entire time
i swear soda was by far the more common of the two terms, with pop only being in a few areas
guess i was hallucinating this entire time
Not trying to be political or anything but here's undeniable proof with context that it is in fact, soda:Clearly we need to ask the entire world (English second language included) because I call it "soda" too
It's just a(n) accent, don't mind it. wtf is a grammar chameleon supposed to be?i've also noticed that you occasionally use 'a' in front of a noun that begins with a vowel sound rather than 'an'. so i'd either call you a grammar chameleon or just slightly illiterate.
i've also noticed that you occasionally use 'a' in front of a noun that begins with a vowel sound rather than 'an'. so i'd either call you a grammar chameleon or just slightly illiterate.