Supre Sweets offer a pretty good smoke for a machine made cigar. The price is about half of other comparable brands (eg: Swisher Sweets, Dutch Masters, William Penn). That lower price offers far less mark-up per square inch of shelf space to the vendor. Pretty sure you can see where this is going. I personally enjoy Supre Sweets (smoother burn, more consistent product, slight flavor of vanilla all combine to suit me.) You can find Supre sweets easily on the internet. Place your order - enjoy your smokes. Answered by: ObviousAdvice@Yahoo.com
... which means that I rarely eat sweets' is translated '... ce qui veut dire que je mange rarement des bonbons' in French.
a hummingbird that is rarely seen in Newfoundland, was spotted there.
Ford is intensively private, and is rarely photographed smoking a cigar. His preference is REPORTEDLY for the Gurkha brand.
You can trade with you colonies, get cheap goods from them, manufacture them, then sell them back for far much more than you bought them for! You can also attack them and take their stuff, but that rarely ever happend.
No, the name would be "gâteau à la pistache" in French. Pistacchios are not a traditional French nut and even now are rarely used for cooking. Almond is the most common nut used in many desserts or sweets.
I rarely eat chips. I rarely go shopping. I rarely wear shorts. I rarely use the computer.
She rarely frowns. The book is rarely opened.
No, the word rarely is a adverb, a word that modifies a verb. For example:He can rarely sit still for long.She rarely eats meat.We rarely go to the movies.
No, it very rarely does.No, it very rarely does.No, it very rarely does.No, it very rarely does.
My brother rarely goes to the cinema. She is rarely sick
more rarely
Actually it was pretty awsome. Everyone trusted each other. Crimes rarely happend. You could go to bed with your frount door opened and no one would break in and steal anything. People were more human than anything around that time.