Merriam-Websters, quote.
Main Entry: repB7liB7ca
Pronunciation: 're-pli-k&
Function: noun
Etymology: Italian, repetition, from replicare to repeat, from Late Latin,
from Latin, to fold back bmore at <A
HREF="aol://4344:1708.D0057962.40165996.672503745">REPLY</A>
Date: 1824
1 : an exact reproduction (as of a painting) executed by the original artist
<
a replica of this was paintedb& this year bConstance Strachey>
2 : a copy exact in all details <DNA makes a replica of itself> <sailed a
replica of the Viking ship>; broadly : <A
HREF="aol://4344:1708.D0014940.40122974.672502676">COPY</A> <this faithful,
pathetic replica
of a Midwestern suburb bG. F. Kennan>
In a message dated 01/05/2002 7:23:18 PM Central Standard Time,
mgwizard@caloundra.net writes:
A replica, by definition, is a copy - but made by the original "artist" such
as
> 12/12's. Well that is what the Oxford Dictionary says & I guess a USA
> dictionary would be likely to have a similar meaning.
>
But that is the difference.B It was done by MG.
Anyone who does it now is FAKING IT - surely!
Pip,
I thought I'd actually seen guys having orgasms over a K3. Were they only
faking them????
Brian.
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