The line "O, your offense is rank; it smells to heaven" is spoken by King Claudius in Shakespeare's play Hamlet. This line reflects Claudius's guilt and recognition of his sinful actions, particularly his murder of his brother, King Hamlet. It captures the theme of sin and moral corruption that permeates the play. Claudius's awareness of his wrongdoing contrasts with Hamlet's struggle to take action against him.
I don't know this as a fact, but I always thought that it sounded like "PEWW!", what we also say when something smells bad. Think of it as, "PEWW!" when something smells bad, or, "PU!!" when it is down right rank. My 2 cents, at least.
Katie smells = Katie puede oler
Something smells between us
Having been there and done that, I must say that there is not a chance in Heaven. Regis would have quit the first day. I could be wrong, but wouldn't bet on it.
秩 that is how you say rank in Chinese (curtosy of google translate)
No, you say "Ma'am" or refer to them by their rank.
odori
RANK?!?!
There is no telling if there are dinosaurs in heaven. Surely, some may say that they are because animals that die go to heaven, too. Some say they did not go to heaven.
May or may not. No offense means that the intention is not to offend. If you, on the other hand, do get offended it is only your problem.
"Heaven" in Igbo is "ọlị."
People say that fear smells like sweat, but really it smells like metal almost.