"Hi, my name is Batman," said a hooded figure from the shade.
"You're not Batman; you're just a kid!" Four-year-old Jackson retorted.
The figure emerged from under the slides. "Is too!"
Jackson scrunched up his nose. "You're wearing orange. Batman doesn't wear orange
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By the way, I deleted dozens of spammy comments on older games a couple of days ago. I had no idea there were so many, good think they're screened by default.
Don't worry about slytherin100, one prompt a week, I can manage. Just let me know when you're ready to alternate prompting again. (How about going back to prompting on your gen drabbles comm? *is addicted to prompts*)
I'm sticking to LJ for now, occasionally following links to other sites, but that's it.
Don't hold your breath - I passed up a show I really wanted to see yesternight and was happy to trade 10 hours of free time for it. And I have yet to see anything past the first season of Merlin! (Time, where does it go?)
I find that American voices are usually higher pitched than French ones, or rather that high voices are less unusual there than here. But maybe it's just my usual not-paying-much-attention.
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S2 of Merlin...you didn't miss much, really. Arthur just became OoC and M/A friendship devolved instead of evolved. I only watched a few eps of S3 myself.
French Draco Malfoy has a deep, sophisticated voice! So I think you're right about the higher pitch/lower pitch thing. Is it just the men, or do American women on TV also speak with a higher pitch in comparison? Japanese women def. have an almost-artificial high pitch.
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