gordo
Well-known member
??? what do you really want to say?
"it ain't played in gay Pride" (too bad, should be funny to see a base-ball game in the middle of the Gay Pride!!!)
or
"it ain't played in gai Paris", trying clumsily to make an allusion to my french nationality?
For the record (and your spelling education), despite a similar prononciation, in french "gai" and "gay" do not have the same meaning: "gai" means "happy", "merry"...
And "parie" is a conjugation of the verb "parier", which means "to bet"... but I guess that you simply misspell "Paris"?
Or perhaps are you trying to say that homosexual people are not allowed to bet on base-ball games???
In the US "Parie" [sic] (actually "Paree") refers to that city in France. "Paris" on the other hand refers to the city in Texas.
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