"Other builders don't check on things," notes Joe Townsend, general manager of
Cretin's sales and marketing division.
It goes without saying that these two chants royaux can be found, predictably enough, in the "Recueil Vidoue." One of these is by Guillaume
Cretin (fols.
O'Neill said: "On top of everything, you get footballing
cretins like Ken Bates writing in his programme notes that we'd come along and play for penalties.
Helpful too would have been systematic references to related musical settings based on Ockeghem's models and to the numerous citations of his music in contemporaneous poems by Molinet,
Cretin and others, some of which bear on matters of chronology, intertextuality, and cultural history.
"How low will some of these
cretins stoop over a game of football?
What plans does he have to rid the streets of the hooded
cretin creatures and banish all sight and sound of the worthless nonculture to which they adhere?
Having experienced two house fires, one caused by a firework-mad
cretin, we know the skill and wonder of firefighters and paramedics.
The only thing that is funny about this
cretin is the fact he thinks he is funny.
Every educated person wants to be known as a "book lover." Hence, to be indifferent to, much less openly disagree with, Nicholson Baker's Double Fold: Libraries and the Assault on Paper (Random House, $25.95) is to declare yourself an illiterate, an enemy of history, a
cretin of the first order.
Yet that's exactly what that wee
cretin Dappy did last week.
The
cretin who threw the coin should be banned from all Villa matches for the rest of his/her life.
It's just sad that the decent, hard-working people of Liverpool get tarred with the same brush as this idiot, who because he can kick a ball, is idolised instead of denounced as the
cretin he is.