Frist Stone: Difference between revisions

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* "Let he who be without sin cast the frist stone."
* "Let he who be without sin cast the frist stone."
* "When I trip over a frist stone."<ref>Technically, even more unlikely than a [[cachence]]</ref>
* "When I trip over a frist stone."<ref>generally understood to be even more unlikely than a [[cachence]]</ref>
* "Pockets full of frist stones." <ref>aka skint, brassic, hankering for a queenie, broke</ref><ref>this may be where the expression 'stony broke' came from</ref><ref>no it isn't</ref>
* "Pockets full of frist stones." <ref>aka skint, brassic, hankering for a queenie, broke</ref><ref>this may be where the expression 'stony broke' came from</ref><ref>no it isn't</ref>



Latest revision as of 11:05, 5 July 2015

The Frist Stone is not a stone at all, but a mythical metallic object that, by definition, cannot ever exist.

According to SlabLegend, a Frist Stone can only be forged by a perfect who had never made an error and was incapable of ever doing so. Hence the expressions;

  • "Let he who be without sin cast the frist stone."
  • "When I trip over a frist stone."[1]
  • "Pockets full of frist stones." [2][3][4]


references

  1. generally understood to be even more unlikely than a cachence
  2. aka skint, brassic, hankering for a queenie, broke
  3. this may be where the expression 'stony broke' came from
  4. no it isn't