It means that Nicketty Nox is very skinny and slim or they're just the same words.
He is a very
slim person
A dry stick is an insulator.
-Chad
Amagnate can stick to certain plates, If there is a plate in your body that magnates can stick to then it has to determine where in the body the plate is. If its near the skin then probably yes, but if its deeper in your body the magnate may not stick
Hammer one rock againt another until a sharp edge is produced. Use this sharp edge like a chisel to sharpen the stick. Do not run around with a pointy stick, you'll put your eye out.
they are supposed to be a mix of pure metals, such as nickel,zinc,copper and silver.but i have state quarters that do stick to magnets.
hi
Sir Nicketty Nox Sir Nicketty Nox was an ancient knight, So old was he that he'd lost his sight. Blind as a mole, and slim as a fox, And dry as a stick was Sir Nicketty Nox. His sword and buckler were old and cracked, So was his charger and that's a fact. Thin as a rake from head to hocks, Was this rickety Nag of Sir Nicketty Nox. A wife he had and daughters three, And all were as old as old could be. They mended the shirts and darned the socks Of that old Antiquity, Nicketty Nox. Sir Nicketty Nox would fly in a rage If anyone tried to guess his age. He'd mouth and mutter and tear his locks, This very pernickety Nicketty Nox. Written as you state by Hugh Chesterman
It just makes your stick person's appearance look different.
persevere
The phrase "dry as a stick" means extremely dry or lacking moisture. It is used to describe something that is very arid or dehydrated.
"Waving his stick and shouting angrily" is a phrase because it does not express a complete thought and lacks a subject and a verb. It is a dependent clause that does not stand alone as a sentence.
According to the Oxford English Dictionary this phrase first appeared in an issue of the Lancaster Journal of Pennsylvania dated 5 August 1818: "We have in Lancaster as many Taverns as you can shake a stick at". Modern use of this phrase is often -- "more xxxx than you can shake a stick at", meaning an abundance, plenty. The meaning is not clear of the phrase is not clear.
Theodore Roosevelt used the phrase regarding the diplomatic use of force. It was "Speak softly and carry a big stick; you will go far".
The answer seems to be that the answer to whether or not if it is a stick or not depends on how the asker begins the question. Let's say the phrase is "Okay". Then if the asker begins by saying something like -- Okay, now... if this is a stick... and this is not a stick .... and this is a stick... Then is this a stick? the answer depends on if the asker interjected the word "Okay" or not in the statement or question. The phrase may vary in circles. The word may be "listen" or "now". The key is listen for a common phrase that was used when the asker tell the guess whether "it" is a stick or not. It really does not depend on if a stick is really uses or not an can confuse guessers even more when a finger is a stick or a real stick is not a stick! By the way you ask this question you've just answered it yourself, because if this is a stick and this is a stick the other thing must be a stick too.
Stick on my velcro :)
really any size. I highly suggest getting at least 2GB stick. I
If you're a woman, I suggest the shift-stick on your car. If you're a man, I suggest the exhaust pipe.