Jacaylbaro
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Everything posted by Jacaylbaro
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how someone from a wedding can sleep ,,,,, i'm still dancing on the bed
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look this guy hiding in Hargeisa ,,,, where are you man ?? Hunguri, waar niyow my inbox is as empty as my stomach now ,,,,, i need your advice ? haye, wassup reer bani aadam ???? Just came back from a wedding ,, it is 2am here
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Xanthus, me is trying to increase his posts ,,, that is all about his groundless arguments ,,
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The connection is not supporting me today ,,, i'll watch it some other time IA ...
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and isn't clannism what you've been talking about all these days ????
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seems you have a lot in your mind ,,,, construct and/or deconstruct ,,, then when you finish looking at them ,, what do u normally feel ?? tired, excited, proud, disgusted, etc ??
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With three kids in the house, Stacie Zaragosa and her husband, Ricardo, have to get creative when they want to escape the crowd. So this Winsted, CT, couple have come up with a secret code phrase that lets them slip up to the bedroom, no questions asked. "One of us will say, 'I think we should both go upstairs and fold the laundry,' " says Stacie, 34. "The kids would never go near laundry, so it's a safe bet!" Whatever your secret code is, speaking a private language doesn't just give you two a charge - it actually has the power to strengthen your bond. "Public displays of commitment - such as having a signal at a party to let each other know you're bored and want to leave - are better predictors of a couple's longevity and stability than public displays of affection, according to a recent study," says therapist Pat Love, coauthor of the upcoming book How to Improve Your Marriage Without Talking About It. "That's because these acts show nonverbally that you think as a couple, that your partner's having a good time is as important as your having a good time, and that your commitment to each other is bigger than your commitment to almost anything else." (Not taking sides against your spouse in a heated cocktail-party political debate - or even something as simple as finishing your meals at more or less the same time - also counts as public displays of commitment.) "Communicating in code reinforces your solidarity and rapport," adds Diana Boxer, Ph.D., a professor of linguistics at the University of Florida. "It not only shows off your identity as a couple, it actually strengthens it, and that makes you feel more connected." Where Do Codes Come From? Three words: your shared history. "When couples have a meaningful experience together, they tend to use a word or phrase as a shorthand way of evoking the entire experience," says redbook Love Network expert Tina B. Tessina, Ph.D., couples therapist and author of How to Be a Couple and Still Be Free. For Tessina and her husband, that word is "candles," because on their honeymoon, they passed out with candles blazing and almost torched the place. "Now all one of us has to say is 'candles' and we both laugh," she says. No couple sits down and makes a point of figuring out a covert phrase or signal to share; rather, "The meaning of a code evolves over time," Boxer notes. "The more we get to know each other, the more we understand how the other person thinks." Usually, codes are created at random, as was the case for Andrea Nemeth, 36, and her husband, Vadim Shleyfman, of Caldwell, NJ. "When we wave our hands in a shooting motion like a gun, we mean, 'I love you,'" Andrea says. Its origin? She can't remember! "We created it in some goofy moment," she says, and they now use it often. What Code Can Do for Your Love Having your own shorthand is a time-saver, for sure. But your catchphrases and nonverbal cues can also help you put hard-to-express emotions into words, find a comfortable way to ask for sex, even say, "Why are we fighting, anyway?" Some of the surprising benefits of your secret language:
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yes that is it ,,,,,,,, don't be that angry now
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Mogadishu: TFG forces take fight to enemy hiding in market
Jacaylbaro replied to General Duke's topic in Politics
AND I THOUGHT THE TFG CIIDAMO ARE FIGHTING EACH OTHER .......... WHY IS THIS BELOW NEWS BAL ?? __________________________________________ Mogadishu 19, July 07 ( Sh.M.Network)- Israsaaseyn ayaa gudaha suuqa Bakaaraha ku dhex martay ciidamo ka wada tirsan dowladda KMG ah oo isku maan dhaafay sida la sheegay howl-gallo ay halkaasi ka wadeen. Ciidamada israsaaseynta ku dhex martay galabta suuqa Bakaaraha ayaa waxa ay ku labisnaayeen dareeska Militariga ee tuutaha iyo dharka cagaaran sida ay shabelle u sheegeen dad gooboogayaal ah. -
was just following your responses they are all coming in less than 5 minutes ,,,, pretty good job no ??
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I'm wondering if women are trusted in India ?? if they calling not to trust men, them why not women too ???
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hahahaha ,,, you are really doing a good job again ?? 5 min ,,,,,,,,,
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ya you better stop the questions no ??
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again ,, i give you 5 minutes
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looooooooooool ,,,,, i'm glad that i'm getting my crew back haye haye ,, aw hunguri ahaa ,,,,, warka soo daa sxb. Nom, i will give you 5 minutes
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Sample polls shows majority of Southerners support Somaliland
Jacaylbaro replied to Suldaanka's topic in Politics
Any other polls recently ?? -
Somali Weyn - Realistic Vision or Idealistic Dream?
Jacaylbaro replied to Warmoog's topic in General
so, what was the discussion about ?? -
ya man ,, that is right no ?? ya, i'm gonna send ya to da jail and you fine with that no ??
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IT IS not easy being a religious policeman. The 5,000-odd agents of Saudi Arabia's Commission for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice (commonly referred to as the Haya, or Commission) carry a heavy burden of responsibility. Not only must they do things such as make sure shops close for the five daily prayers, enforce modesty of attire and strict separation of the sexes in public, prevent sorcery, and round up bootleggers and drug dealers. They must also impose summary new bans, such as recent ones against trading in pet cats and dogs in the port city of Jeddah, and against barbers offering Western-style haircuts that “imitate unbelievers” in Medina, Islam's second holiest city. Lately, their lot has grown harder. A spate of public complaints about the religious police's excessive zeal, exacerbated by press reports of several citizens dying while in their custody, has put the commission on the defensive. At least one Saudi has dared, for the first time in the kingdom, to demand compensation in a civil suit against the Haya. She charges that agents accosted her and her daughter outside a shopping mall, accused them of being underdressed, dragged their driver from his seat and, while commandeering the car to drive the accused women to vice-squad headquarters for questioning, drove so recklessly that they crashed into a lamppost, injuring the passengers. On internet chat sites and even in newspaper columns, some writers have even suggested that the Commission be abolished. Things have not looked so bad for it since 2002, when its agents were widely reported to have blocked exits to a blazing girls' school, on the ground that the fleeing pupils were improperly attired. Fourteen girls died as a result. Afterwards, tiresome rules were imposed on vice-squad agents. They were told to wear badges while on duty, discouraged from carrying sticks, and required to surrender all apprehended suspects to ordinary police. Many even had to endure training sessions in how to be polite to the public. Yet by most accounts those rules have not proved too restrictive. The mutawaeen, as the agents are known, can count on many unofficial helpers to tip them off. The regular police generally sympathise with their fellow law-enforcers and can be conveniently slow to arrive when called to pick up suspects. Haya supporters have fended off harsher legislation that would have required mutawaeen to wear uniform, as well as calls for their duties to be defined within specific limits. Some Saudi liberals hope that renewed pressure for reform will bear fruit. They note that, over the decades, things once banned, such as riding bicycles or smoking cigarettes, have come to be overlooked. Yet the commission has good reason to be confident of its future. For one thing, its mission of promoting virtue and preventing vice, while perhaps not well defined, remains a scriptural Islamic injunction. In a state that proclaims the Koran as its constitution, this cannot easily be dismissed. For another, the Haya's existence helps solve two pressing social problems: high unemployment and a very large surplus of graduates in religious studies.
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Bilad sharaf la gudoonsiiyay wasiirka qorshaynta qaranka ee Somaliland
Jacaylbaro replied to Jacaylbaro's topic in Politics
Hargeysa-(Hormoodnews) Wasiirka Wasaarada Qorshaynta Cali Ibraahim Maxamed , ayaa maanta gudoomay Bilad sharaf uga timid Jaaliyada Somaliland ee dalka Denmark. Shahaadadan waxa wasiirka soo gaadhsiiyay oo gudoonsiiyay Muwaadin Axmed Kooj oo ka mid ah Jaaliyada Somaliland ee Denmark . Sida ay sheegayaan wararka ku dhow dhow , Wasiirku waxa uu ku mutaystay Billada isbedelka uu ka muujiyay Mudadii uu xilka hayay shaqada Wasaarada iyo hawl gelinta hay'adaha Samo falka -
In muddo ah waanu ka shaqeynaynay Madaarka Caasimada Hargeysa oo meel wanaagsan ayey noo mareysa oo hawlo badan ayaa ka socda waxaanuna jecelnahay inaan badankooda dhawaan soo gebagabeyno, sida tan Diyaaraduhu habeenkii ku soo dagayaan habeenkii Madaarka oo waxay ka bilaabmaysaa markay bishan July dhamaato oo kowda bisha August ee sanadkan 2007 laga soo degidoono, oo imika waxaanu wadnaa tijaabadiisii oo waanu tijaabinay. HERE
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Amaantaada ma koobi karoo Nuurkii indhahaad tahayoo Intaan noolahay infka Uurkaan kugu haynayaa Ii gargaaroo Lurkayga bii Intaa waan ku eeganayee Anna kaama maarmi karoo Indhahaygii baad tahaye KUMEE ,, KUMEE ,, KUMEE ,, KUMEE ???