Phenase's Posts
Nairaland Forum › Phenase's Profile › Phenase's Posts
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 (of 26 pages)
Talibanis:thanks |
Iron2011:thanks |
otr1:You are right, that's what speaking in tongue is all about and not all these noise makers. Speaking in tongue comes when the need arises and is a language people can understand |
![]() Wait let me ask Nwamaikpe
|
NwaAmaikpe: ![]() |
NwaAmaikpe:
|
kiddoiLL:Guy visit that church and learn better and don't be ignorant. |
phillips1959:FEEL FREE AND VISIT THE CHURCH ANYWHERE YOU SEE IT AND ASK ANY QUESTION BOTHERING YOU ABOUT IT |
Godsgal:NO |
When will I buy this kind of cars. Father in heaven please pick my calls. |
Good network |
Naija |
Oh
|
You too dey do babymama |
I don't like eating hens |
Irrelevant |
Nawao |
Bad people everywhere. |
Ok |
Wonder
|
Haaa
|
henryanna36:Real vacancies, my brothers and sisters, lol |
"Please this talk about restructuring, we must concretize it, this talk about federalism, we must concretize it. You can’t be coming to Abuja every month to collect money and you are talking of true federalism. True federalism means you must produce what you need in your area ad they can ask everybody to pay tax.” - FALANA |
They are also find in FIN Facebook group use by some of these women. My wife doesn't play with that group. |
http://www.firmtech1.com/2017/04/north-korea-preparing-for-sixth-nuclear.html?m=1 North Korea may soon conduct its sixth nuclear test in the face of the United States' decision to move a carrier group toward the region. Satellite imagery shows activity at the Punggye-ri testing site, analysts from 38 North, a U.S. research institute that monitors North Korea, wrote on its website Wednesday. Foreign journalists inside the country were told to prepare for a "big and important event" Thursday, Reuters reported. The analysts added that there was movement around one of the portals and in the main administrative area of the site as well as personnel seen at the command center. South Korean officials downplayed any news signs that a test was coming, Bloomberg reported. South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff spokesman Roh Jae-cheon told reporters that Seoul saw no signs that North Korea was preparing any sort of provocative actions. Officials added that Pyongyang has maintained such readiness that it could conduct a missile test without warning, according to Reuters. Chinese President Xi Jingping told Trump in a phone call Wednesday that he wants a peaceful solution to ending North Korea’s nuclear weapons program and would be willing to work with Washington on the matter. "China insists on realizing the denuclearization of the peninsula ... and is willing to maintain communication and coordination with the American side over the issue on the peninsula," Xi was quoted as saying by state media. Trump had warned North Korea Tuesday that he vowed to get Kim Jong –Un’s regime under control with or without China’s help. Meanwhile, North Korea said Monday it would “hold the U.S. wholly accountable for the catastrophic consequences” if there was any further military action after the USS Carl Vinson arrives in the area of the Korean Peninsula.
|
derancle:You can get it, I have it 90cm at Aba |
As shared by a Facebook user
|
The Dumbest Deaths In Recorded History Attila the Hun: One of the most notorious villains in history, Attila’s army had conquered all of Asia by 450 AD-from Mongolia to the edge of the Russian Empire-by destroying villages and pillaging the countryside. How he died: He got a nosebleed on his wedding night. In 453 AD, Attila married a young girl named Ildico. Despite his reputation for ferocity on the battlefield, he tended to eat and drink lightly during large banquets. On his wedding night, however, he really cut loose, gorging himself on food and drink. Sometime during the night he suffered a nosebleed, but was too drunk to notice. He drowned in his own blood and was found dead the next morning. Tycho Brahe: An important Danish astronomer of the 16th century. His ground breaking research allowed Sir Isaac Newton to come up with the theory of gravity. How he died: Didn’t get to the bathroom in time. In the 16th century, it was considered an insult to leave a banquet table before the meal was over. Brahe, known to drink excessively, had a bladder condition-but failed to relieve himself before the banquet started. He made matters worse by drinking too much at dinner, and was too polite to ask to be excused. His bladder finally burst, killing him slowly and painfully over the next 11 days. Horace Wells: Pioneered the use of anesthesia in the 1840s How he died: Used anesthetics to commit suicide. While experimenting with various gases during his anesthesia research, Wells became addicted to chloroform. In 1848 he was arrested for spraying two women with sulfuric acid. In a letter he wrote from jail, he blamed chloroform for his problems, claiming that he’d gotten high before the attack. Four days later he was found dead in his cell. He’d anaesthetized himself with chloroform and slashed open his thigh with a razor. Francis Bacon: One of the most influential minds of the late 16th century. A statesman, a philosopher, a writer, and a scientist, he was even rumored to have written some of Shakespeare’s plays. How he died: Stuffing snow into a chicken One afternoon in 1625, Bacon was watching a snowstorm and was struck by the wondrous notion that maybe snow could be used to preserve meat in the same way that salt was used. Determined to find out, he purchased a chicken from a nearby village, killed it, and then, standing outside in the snow, attempted to stuff the chicken full of snow to freeze it. The chicken never froze, but Bacon did. Jerome Irving Rodale: Founding father of the organic food movement, creator of “Organic Farming and Gardening” magazine, and founder of Rodale Press, a major publishing corporation. How he died: On the “Dick Cavett Show”, while discussing the benefits of organic foods. Rodale, who bragged “I’m going to live to be 100 unless I’m run down by a sugar-crazed taxi driver,” was only 72 when he appeared on the “Dick Cavett Show” in January 1971. Part way through the interview, he dropped dead in his chair. Cause of death: heart attack. The show was never aired. Aeschylus: A Greek playwright back in 500 BC. Many historians consider him the father of Greek tragedies. How he died: An eagle dropped a tortoise on his head According to legend, eagles picked up tortoises and attempt to crack them open by dropping them on rocks. An eagle mistook Aeschylus’ head for a rock (he was bald) and dropped it on him instead. Jim Fixx: Author of the best selling “Complete Book of Running,” which started the jogging craze of the 1970s. How he died: A heart attack….while jogging Fixx was visiting Greensboro, Vermont when he walked out of his house and began jogging. He’d only gone a short distance when he had a massive coronary. His autopsy revealed that one of his coronary arteries was 99% clogged, another was 80% obstructed, and a third was 70% blocked….and that Fixx had had three other attacks in the weeks prior to his death. http://www.firmtech1.com/2017/03/the-dumbest-deaths-in-recorded-history.html?m=1
|
kolajoo:Presido why nah ![]()
|
Don't wear this next time, unless if they job warrant you to wear Abada.
|
2 Continents has Falling
|
chei !
|