“They found a small, but statistically significant link, and were able to show that this could not be explained by unhealthy habits, such as smoking or drinking alcohol.”
Lead researcher Dr Rosalind Arden said: “This does not mean that men who prefer Play-Doh to Plato always have poor sperm: the relationship we found was marginal.”
Interesting, but if the relationship is marginal, I guess we’d better get our asses off our laurels and back into the gym.
On a side note, it always bugs me that they don’t have the numbers published as well. It would be interesting to see.
[quote]pzehtoeur wrote:
ShaneM686 wrote:
I always thought I had super-sperm… this helps legitimate my delusion.
Legitimize*
Oh, the irony.[/quote]
The word “legitimate” can be used as both an adjective (“he is not the legitimate (rhymes with “ejaculate”, the noun) heir to the throne”) and as a verb (“he paid off three judges in order to legitimate (rhymes with “ejaculate”, the verb) his claim”).
In other words, it was used correctly by ShaneM686.
[quote]Varqanir wrote:
pzehtoeur wrote:
ShaneM686 wrote:
I always thought I had super-sperm… this helps legitimate my delusion.
Legitimize*
Oh, the irony.
The word “legitimate” can be used as both an adjective (“he is not the legitimate (rhymes with “ejaculate”, the noun) heir to the throne”) and as a verb (“he paid off three judges in order to legitimate (rhymes with “ejaculate”, the verb) his claim”).
In other words, it was used correctly by ShaneM686. [/quote]
[quote]ShaneM686 wrote:
Varqanir wrote:
pzehtoeur wrote:
ShaneM686 wrote:
I always thought I had super-sperm… this helps legitimate my delusion.
Legitimize*
Oh, the irony.
The word “legitimate” can be used as both an adjective (“he is not the legitimate (rhymes with “ejaculate”, the noun) heir to the throne”) and as a verb (“he paid off three judges in order to legitimate (rhymes with “ejaculate”, the verb) his claim”).
In other words, it was used correctly by ShaneM686.