[QUOTE=Spooon;71940]
Where does it say that?
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[QUOTE=benjiro;71941]
You and Chicken.
[/QUOTE]
[spoilerbox=Dictionary; Where]
[QUOTE=WHERE Definition & Meaning | Dictionary.com]
where
[hwair, wair]
–adverb
1.
in or at what place?: Where is he? Where do you live?
2.
in what position or circumstances?: Where do you stand on this question? Without money, where are you?
3.
in what particular respect, way, etc.?: Where does this affect us?
4.
to what place, point, or end? whither?: Where are you going?
5.
from what source? whence?: Where did you get such a notion?
–conjunction
6.
in or at what place, part, point, etc.: Find where he is. Find where the trouble is.
7.
in or at the place, part, point, etc., in or at which: The book is where you left it.
8.
in a position, case, etc., in which: Where ignorance is bliss, 'tis folly to be wise.
9.
in any place, position, case, etc., in which; wherever: Use the ointment where pain is felt.
10.
to what or whatever place; to the place or any place to which: I will go where you go.
11.
in or at which place; and there: They came to the town, where they lodged for the night.
–pronoun
12.
what place?: Where did you come from?
13.
the place in which; point at which: This is where the boat docks. That was where the phone rang.
–noun
14.
a place; that place in which something is located or occurs: the wheres and hows of job hunting.
—Idiom
15.
where it’s at, Slang . where the most exciting, prestigious, or profitable activity or circumstance is to be found.
Origin:
before 900; Middle English quher, wher, Old English hwǣr; cognate with Dutch waar, Old High German hwār; akin to Old Norse hvar, Gothic hwar
—Can be confused: 1. we’re, were, where ; 2. where, wherefore (see usage note at the current entry ).
—Usage note
Where … at ( Where was he at? ) and where … to ( Where is this leading to? ) are often criticized as redundant because neither at nor to adds anything to the meaning of where, and sentences like the preceding ones are perfectly clear and standard without the final at or to. This criticism does not apply to where … from, which is fully standard: Where does the money come from? The constructions where … at and where … to occur in the speech of educated people but are rare in formal speech and edited writing.
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[/spoilerbox]Thought you would like to know the definition of WHERE ben.
Also, iNoobs stop glorifying yourself because you “moved on” from iGraal. You guys still play it. Some of you are closet iGraal players, and some of you have admitted it, but you are all seriously getting on my nerves.