2912 comments given:
avatar Zizounai
Zizounai says:

Congrats George very well done, can you please tell us the trick, how comes when you put 2 dots in each corner you can get a pattern? (if it is not too difficult to explain)

(5 years and 345 days ago)

DIGITAL CLOCK
avatar Zizounai
Zizounai says:

Congrats Chakra! Welcome back, please stay

(5 years and 345 days ago)

Inside space
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Zizounai says:

Congrats Verikakis

(5 years and 345 days ago)

Leather Fish
avatar Zizounai
Zizounai says:

Congrats Verikakis, so cute and beautiful

(5 years and 352 days ago)

Christmas flight
avatar Zizounai
Zizounai says:

Congrats Ernest, very happy new year, with lots of funny shots like this one

(5 years and 352 days ago)

The Christmas Tick
avatar Zizounai
Zizounai says:

Congrats Maxim

(5 years and 352 days ago)

A kiss
avatar Zizounai
Zizounai says:

For the other half... living things??? fish? kitten? puppies? butterflies? snakes? whales? spiders? raccoons?

(5 years and 354 days ago)

Rim of
avatar Zizounai
Zizounai says:

(5 years and 357 days ago)

Clue in description
avatar Zizounai
Zizounai says:

It is pretty led lights in your computer, just behind the ventilation grid. So glamour!

(5 years and 357 days ago)

Inside of
avatar Zizounai
Zizounai says:

Or is it the shadow of a grid for grilling crickets?

(5 years and 357 days ago)

Clue in description
avatar Zizounai
Zizounai says:

Thanks for this beautiful English lesson Author. I feel enlightened (I must say it before Brian does)
I meant window shades, shades like stores in this case, making their shadows on the wall?

(5 years and 357 days ago)

Clue in description
avatar Zizounai
Zizounai says:


A trip to Columbo for two then?

(5 years and 357 days ago)

For Cleaning
avatar Zizounai
Zizounai says:

Oh yes please

(5 years and 357 days ago)

Inside of
avatar Zizounai
Zizounai says:

Thanks! do I have two weeks to claim my prize?

(5 years and 357 days ago)

from Sri Lanka
avatar Zizounai
Zizounai says:

Your desk is situated by a window. You're lucky for in your cell they have not put the usual dull bars at the window, but a kind of grid looking like honeycomb. What you can see through it are the city lights when the evening comes.

(5 years and 357 days ago)

Inside of
avatar Zizounai
Zizounai says:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?reload=9&v=P1vRv0Yy62s

(5 years and 357 days ago)

For Cleaning
avatar Zizounai
Zizounai says:

This is the rim of the basket in which you keep your crickets and roaches before having them grilled.

(5 years and 357 days ago)

Rim of
avatar Zizounai
Zizounai says:

Shade, but shade of what? shade of window shades?

(5 years and 357 days ago)

Clue in description
avatar Zizounai
Zizounai says:

A fan?

(5 years and 357 days ago)

from Sri Lanka
avatar Zizounai
Zizounai says:

A steam tank locomotive LSWR 415 class???

(5 years and 358 days ago)

What
avatar Zizounai
Zizounai says:

Yes, this is exactly the expected result, happy new year Olga
(even if it is just routine to you, how many new years do you have in Thailand every year, so how many years in a month, do they come before or after all of us?)

(5 years and 358 days ago)

Sisterhood of Sellers
avatar Zizounai
Zizounai says:

How kind of you, thanks my friend, hope we will continue for another long time and even more

(5 years and 359 days ago)

What Lies Beneath
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Zizounai says:

just before Balbus (who had followed them out) closed the door? Surely not: and yet the butler told the cook — but no — that was merely idle gossip, and I will not repeat it.
The shades of evening granted their unuttered petition, and “closed not o’er” them (for the butler brought in the lamp): the same obliging shades left them a “lonely bark” (the wail of a dog, in the back-yard, baying the moon) for “a while”: but neither “morn, alas”, nor any other epoch, seemed likely to “restore” them — to that peace of Mind which had once been theirs ere ever these problems had swooped upon them, and crushed them with a load of unfathomable mystery!
“It’s hardly fair,” muttered Hugh, “to give us such a jumble as this to work out!”
“Fair?” Clara echoed bitterly. “Well!”
And to all my readers I can but repeat the last words of gentle Clara:
FARE-WELL!

(5 years and 359 days ago)

Sisterhood of Sellers
avatar Zizounai
Zizounai says:

Thanks for all these good wishes, same to you. But which one of us will be the first one in the new year? I have a tale for you:
A Tangled Tale, by Lewis Carroll
KNOT 10
CHELSEA BUNS
YEA, BUNS, AND BUNS, AND BUNS!
OLD SONG.
“How very, very sad!” exclaimed Clara; and the eyes of the gentle girl filled with tears as she spoke,
“Sad — but very curious when you come to look at it arithmetically,” was her aunt’s less romantic reply. “Some of them have lost an arm in their country’s service, some a leg, some an ear, some an eye — ”
“And some, perhaps, all!” Clara murmured dreamily, as they passed the long rows of weather-beaten heroes basking in the sun. “Did you notice that very old one, with a red face, who was drawing a map in the dust with his wooden leg, and all the others watching? I think it was a plan of a battle — ”
“The Battle of Trafalgar, no doubt,” her aunt interrupted briskly. “Hardly that, I think,” Clara ventured to say. “You see, in that case, he couldn’t well be alive — ”
“Couldn’t well be alive!” the old lady contemptuously repeated. “He’s as lively as you and me put together! Why, if drawing a map in the dust — with one’s wooden leg — doesn’t prove one to be alive, perhaps you’ll kindly mention what does prove it!”
Clara did not see her way out of it. Logic had never been her forte.
“To return to the arithmetic,” Mad Mathesis resumed — the eccentric old lady never let slip an opportunity of driving her niece into a calculation — “what percentage do you suppose must have lost all four — a leg, an arm, an eye, and an ear?”
“How can I tell?” gasped the terrified girl. She knew well what was coming.
“You ca’n’t, of course, without data,” her aunt replied: “but I’m just going to give you ”
“Give her a Chelsea bun, miss! That’s what most young ladies like best!” The voice was rich and musical, and the speaker dexterously whipped back the snowy cloth that covered his basket, and disclosed a tempting array of the familiar square buns, joined together in rows, richly egged and browned and glistening in the sun.
“No, sir! I shall give her nothing so indigestible! Be off!” The old lady waved her parasol threateningly: but nothing seemed to disturb the good humour of the jolly old man, who marched on, chanting his melodious refrain:
“Far too indigestible, my love!” said the old lady. Percentages will agree with you ever so much better!”
Clara sighed, and there was a hungry look in her eyes as she watched the basket lessening in the distance; but she meekly listened to the relentless old lady, who at once proceeded to count off the data on her fingers.
“Say that 70 per cent have lost an eye — 75 per cent an ear — 80 per cent an arm — 85 per cent a leg — that’ll do it beautifully. Now, my dear, what percentage, at least, must have lost all four?”
No more conversation occurred unless a smothered exclamation of, “Piping hot!” which escaped from Clara’s lips as the basket vanished round a corner could be counted as such — until they reached the old Chelsea mansion, where Clara’s father was then staying, with his three sons and their old tutor.
Balbus, Lambert, and Hugh had entered the house only a few minutes before them. They had been out walking, and Hugh had been propounding a difficulty which had reduced Lambert to the depths of gloom, and had even puzzled Balbus.
“It changes from Wednesday to Thursday at midnight, doesn’t it?” Hugh had begun.
“Sometimes,” said Balbus cautiously.
“Always,” said Lambert decisively.
“Sometimes,” Balbus gently insisted. “Six midnights out of seven, it changes to some other name.”
“I meant, of course,” Hugh corrected, “when it does change from Wednesday to Thursday, it does it at midnight — and only at midnight.”
“Surely,” said Balbus. Lambert was silent.
“Well, now, suppose it’s midnight here in Chelsea. Then it’s Wednesday west of Chelsea (say in Ireland or America), where midnight hasn’t arrived yet: and it’s Thursday east of Chelsea (say in Germany or Russia), where midnight has just passed by?”
“Surely,” Balbus said again. Even Lambert nodded this time.
“But it isn’t midnight anywhere else; so it ca’n’t be changing from one day to another anywhere else. And yet, if Ireland and America and so on call it Wednesday, and Germany and Russia and so on call it Thursday, there must be some place — not Chelsea — that has different days on the two sides of it. And the worst of it is, people there get their days in the wrong order: they’ve Wednesday east of them, and Thursday west — just as if their day had changed from Thursday to Wednesday!”
“I’ve heard that puzzle before!” cried Lambert. “And I’ll tell you the explanation. When a ship goes round world from east to west, we know that it loses a day in its reckoning: so that when it gets home and calls its day Wednesday, it finds people here calling it Thursday, because we’ve had one more midnight than the ship has had. And when you go the other way round you gain a day.”
“I know all that,” said Hugh, in reply to this not lucid explanation: “but it doesn’t help me, because the ship hasn’t proper days. One way round, you get more than twenty-four hours to the day, and the other way you get less: so of course the names get wrong: but people that live on in one place always get twenty-four hours to the day.”
“I suppose there is such a place,” Balbus said, meditatively, “though I never heard of it, And the people must find it queer, as Hugh says, to have the old day east of them, and the new one west: because, when midnight comes round to them, with the new day in front of it and the old one behind it, one doesn’t see exactly what happens. I must think it over.”
So they had entered the house in the state I have described — Balbus puzzled, and Lambert buried in gloomy thought.
“Yes, m’m, Master is at home, m’m,” said the stately old butler. (N.B. — It is only a butler of experience who can manage a series of three M’s together, without any interjacent vowels.) “And the ole party is a-waiting for you in the libery.”
“I don’t like his calling your father an old party,” Mad Mathesis whispered to her niece, as they crossed the hall. And Clara had only just time to whisper in reply, “He meant the whole party,” before they were ushered into the library, and the sight of the five solemn faces there assembled chilled her into silence.
Her father sat at the head of the table, and mutely signed to the ladies to take the two vacant chairs, one on each side of him. His three sons and Balbus completed the party. Writing materials had been arranged round the table, after the fashion of a ghostly banquet: the butler had evidently bestowed much thought on the grim device. Sheets of quarto paper, each flanked by a pen on One side and a pencil on the other, represented the plates — penwipers did duty for rolls of bread — while ink-bottles stood in the places usually occupied by wine-glasses. The piece de resistance was a large green baize bag, which gave forth, as the old man restlessly lifted it from side to side, a charming jingle, as of innumerable golden guineas,
“Sister, daughter, sons and Balbus — “ the old man began, so nervously that Balbus put in a gentle “Hear, hear!” while Hugh drummed on the table with his fists. This disconcerted the unpractised orator. “Sister — “ he began again, then paused a moment, moved the bag to the other side, and went on with a rush, “I mean — this being — a critical occasion — more or less — being the year, when one of my sons comes of age — “ he paused again, in some confusion, having evidently got into the middle of his speech sooner than he intended: but it was too late, to go back. “Hear, hear!” cried Balbus. “Quite so,” said the old gentleman, recovering his self-possession a little: “when first I began this annual custom — my friend Balbus will correct me if I am wrong — “ (Hugh whispered, “With a strap!” but nobody heard him except Lambert, who only frowned and shook his head at him) “ — this annual custom of giving each of my sons as many guineas, as would represent his age — it was a critical time — so Balbus informed me — as the ages of two of you were together equal to that of the third — so on that occasion I made a speech — He paused so long that Balbus thought it well to come to the rescue with the words, “It was a most — ” but the old man checked him with a warning look: “yes, made a speech,” he repeated. “A few years after that, Balbus pointed out — I say pointed out — “ (“Hear, hear!” cried Balbus. “Quite so,” said the grateful old man.) “ — that it was another critical occasion. The ages of two of you were together double that of the third. So I made another speech — another speech. And now again it’s a critical occasion — so Balbus says — and I am making — “ (here Mad Mathesis pointedly referred to her watch) “all the haste I can!” the old man cried, with wonderful presence of mind. “Indeed, sister, I’m coming to the point now! The number of years that have passed since that first occasion is just two-thirds of the numbers of guineas I then gave you. Now, my boys, calculate your ages from the data, and you shall have the money!”
“But we know our ages!” cried Hugh.
“Silence, sir!” thundered the old man, rising to his full height (he was exactly five-foot five) in his indignation. “I say you must use the data only! You mustn’t even assume which it is that comes of age!” He clutched the bag as he spoke, and with tottering steps (it was about as much as he could do to carry it) he left the room.
“And you shall have a similar cadeau” the old lady whispered to her niece, “when you’ve calculated that percentage!” And she followed her brother.
Nothing could exceed the solemnity with which the old couple had risen from the table, and yet was it as it a grin with which the father turned away from his unhappy sons? Could it be — could it be a wink with which the aunt abandoned her despairing niece? And were those — were those sounds of suppressed chuckling which floated into the room, just before Balbus (who

(5 years and 359 days ago)

Sisterhood of Sellers
avatar Zizounai
Zizounai says:

Congrats Randy

(5 years and 359 days ago)

Melancholly
avatar Zizounai
Zizounai says:

Congrats to you, champion of the streets

(5 years and 359 days ago)

Sisterhood of Sellers
avatar Zizounai
Zizounai says:

Congrats Mr Slush, bravo

(5 years and 359 days ago)

Office Window Treatment
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Zizounai says:

Congrats Brah B

(5 years and 359 days ago)

Dinosaur
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Zizounai says:

Congrats Randy

(5 years and 359 days ago)

Jazzpanzee
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Zizounai says:

Congrats champion George

(5 years and 359 days ago)

What Lies Beneath
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Zizounai says:

(5 years and 362 days ago)

Dinosaur
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Zizounai says:

Also beautiful and appetizing

(5 years and 366 days ago)

Sticky?  You bet!
avatar Zizounai
Zizounai says:

Bravo Lolu, et joyeux Noël

(5 years and 366 days ago)

Hot Dog
avatar Zizounai
Zizounai says:

Congrats Kiruguro, the title and the image are a delight together, very funny

(5 years and 367 days ago)

Bone diseases
avatar Zizounai
Zizounai says:

Congrats Olga, beautiful

(5 years and 367 days ago)

Brighten the Night
avatar Zizounai
Zizounai says:

Congrats Still Yes this is sticky but not only

(5 years and 367 days ago)

Sticky?  You bet!
avatar Zizounai
Zizounai says:

Congrats Olga, we share the cake on this one, you're the winner though

(5 years and 367 days ago)

Fallow  &  Fecund
avatar Zizounai
Zizounai says:

Congrats Kyricom

(5 years and 367 days ago)

Orb of Glass Strands
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Zizounai says:

Congrats on 4th George, merry Christmas

(5 years and 367 days ago)

Sunset by the Tower
avatar Zizounai
Zizounai says:

Congrats Mr Slush

(5 years and 367 days ago)

Pisa Bone Hand
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Zizounai says:

IHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH Bravo Lolu

(5 years and 367 days ago)

Wedding cake
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Zizounai says:

Congrats Skyangel, great work

(5 years and 367 days ago)

Apple Headquarters
avatar Zizounai
Zizounai says:

Thanks for making me discover the wonderful Island of Misfit Toys!

(5 years and 367 days ago)

Escape from the Island of Misfit Toys
avatar Zizounai
Zizounai says:

Santa is so commonplace isn't he? Now let's dream of a magic Ticka going all around the world on a microbe driven sleigh, no need for a large chimney anymore...

(5 years and 369 days ago)

The Christmas Tick
avatar Zizounai
Zizounai says:

(5 years and 373 days ago)

I
avatar Zizounai
Zizounai says:

Congrats Filantrop

(5 years and 373 days ago)

Matchstick
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Zizounai says:

Congrats Skyangel

(5 years and 373 days ago)

Roaring Wildfire
avatar Zizounai
Zizounai says:

Congrats Skyangel, this is a smashing chop

(5 years and 373 days ago)

End of the road
avatar Zizounai
Zizounai says:

Congrats Verikakis

(5 years and 373 days ago)

alien mosquito
avatar Zizounai
Zizounai says:

Congrats for all these winning entries Olga, you are the chaaaaampiooooon

(5 years and 373 days ago)

Sorting Coffee Beans