Fornevermore
Everyone puts something random here.
My Spanish teacher gave us this three-day, in-class project where we were required to work in a group of 4 to write and act out a short skit, with three of us being customers and the other one being the waiter. We needed to use some of the new food vocabulary we learned, and we even had to bring props like forks and a notepad for the waiter.
However, my teacher provided the large objects, which essentially consisted of a small square table in the front of the room, with a tablecloth on top and some chairs on the side. However, 2 of the chairs are just normal and only one of them is a rollie (rolly?) chair with wheels on the bottom. Without noticing, I took that one, and, also without noticing too much, I started rolling on it. By the time we were halfway done with the three minute-long show, I was already blissfully rolling almost three feet back and forth each time. Eventually, one of the other “customers” just grabbed onto one of the chair’s legs and didn’t let go until we were done with the play. We got a 96% on it, though.
In English, one of the fluorescent lights was flickering, and my teacher asked one of the tall students to help her remove the cover so that it could be changed. All while the teacher is telling him to be careful up there, the student climbed to the top of one of the desks and took the cover down easily, carefully setting his foot on the ground again. However, when he walked over to hand the case to the teacher, he tripped over one of the chair legs, falling down, and in the process, breaking the case.
I was in one of the Academic team meets (well, specifically, I was sitting on the side, waiting to be switched in). The question reader started to ask, “What country…”
Then, someone buzzes in. “Sorry, that was a mistake.”
“I’m sorry, but you must answer if you buzz in.”
“Um…Afghanistan?”
“That’s…correct, actually.”
At the end of the last period of the day, a group of people near the back of the class were throwing paper balls at the trash basket in the front of the class. However, one of these balls accidentally hit a girl sitting in the front.
She exploded and yelled at them, “*Bleep* you, you *bleep*ing *bleep*heads!”
The teacher just looked up, and then turned back to his computer.
However, my teacher provided the large objects, which essentially consisted of a small square table in the front of the room, with a tablecloth on top and some chairs on the side. However, 2 of the chairs are just normal and only one of them is a rollie (rolly?) chair with wheels on the bottom. Without noticing, I took that one, and, also without noticing too much, I started rolling on it. By the time we were halfway done with the three minute-long show, I was already blissfully rolling almost three feet back and forth each time. Eventually, one of the other “customers” just grabbed onto one of the chair’s legs and didn’t let go until we were done with the play. We got a 96% on it, though.
In English, one of the fluorescent lights was flickering, and my teacher asked one of the tall students to help her remove the cover so that it could be changed. All while the teacher is telling him to be careful up there, the student climbed to the top of one of the desks and took the cover down easily, carefully setting his foot on the ground again. However, when he walked over to hand the case to the teacher, he tripped over one of the chair legs, falling down, and in the process, breaking the case.
I was in one of the Academic team meets (well, specifically, I was sitting on the side, waiting to be switched in). The question reader started to ask, “What country…”
Then, someone buzzes in. “Sorry, that was a mistake.”
“I’m sorry, but you must answer if you buzz in.”
“Um…Afghanistan?”
“That’s…correct, actually.”
At the end of the last period of the day, a group of people near the back of the class were throwing paper balls at the trash basket in the front of the class. However, one of these balls accidentally hit a girl sitting in the front.
She exploded and yelled at them, “*Bleep* you, you *bleep*ing *bleep*heads!”
The teacher just looked up, and then turned back to his computer.