Hehe . . .
From experience, they do - and then end up in very bitter relationships because their partner won't have intellectual conversations with them and laughs at their big words, and the girl ends up despising the guy because of it . . . ! That's pretty much the story of my parents' marriage (I have very little affinity with my dad's "blue-collar" side of the family) and of erm . . . 2 of my past relationships. No, 4, but two of those lasted less than a fortnight.
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Shane or Sean?  ·  Megan LC  ·  10/28/2004, 9:46 PM
Re: Shane or Sean? (SEAN)  ·  anastasiascott  ·  10/31/2004, 7:55 AM
Sean, spelled Seán. Shane reminds me of "shame". nt  ·  Miranda  ·  10/29/2004, 6:13 PM
Re: Shane or Sean?  ·  hennig  ·  10/29/2004, 12:52 PM
Shane n/t  ·  karen  ·  10/29/2004, 10:56 AM
Sean... all the way. :) nt  ·  reyanna  ·  10/29/2004, 5:47 AM
Re: Shane or Sean?  ·  ducky_feet  ·  10/29/2004, 5:21 AM
Re: Shane or Sean?  ·  Maya  ·  10/29/2004, 4:27 AM
Definitely Sean (nt)  ·  Ane  ·  10/29/2004, 2:04 AM
Re: Shane or Sean?  ·  Chrisell  ·  10/29/2004, 12:12 AM
LOL..  ·  chazda  ·  10/29/2004, 12:49 AM
Hehe . . .  ·  Chrisell  ·  10/29/2004, 1:00 AM
The blue collar/white collar arguement..  ·  Anthony  ·  10/29/2004, 12:54 AM
So true nt  ·  Jacks  ·  10/29/2004, 6:21 AM
Shane [m]  ·  chazda  ·  10/28/2004, 11:09 PM
Re: Shane or Sean?  ·  Phoenix-Fan07  ·  10/28/2004, 11:00 PM
What she means is . . .  ·  Chrisell  ·  10/29/2004, 12:09 AM
Re: Shane or Sean?  ·  TigerLily  ·  10/28/2004, 10:04 PM
Re: Shane or Sean?  ·  Jacks  ·  10/28/2004, 9:49 PM