Doesn't the sky start right at the point where the ground ends?
Doesn't the sky start right at the point where the ground ends?
I may be making the mistake of taking your question seriously.
I'll bite. It means there is no limit.
The sky is space....space never ends. (A concept I've never been able to get my head around)
It means that you can never go beyond the sky.
Outer-space is fake. The whole thing is a hoax. The sky is a solid thing up there that you hit if you go up high enough. your welcome.
LIMIT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
It means the sky is where you stop.
And if the sky starts where the ground ends, you ain't going anywhere. Though I suppose you could tunnel around and shit underground all you want.
The limit does not exist.
Mean Girls wrote:
The limit does not exist.
The sky ising that high before it turns to space. Shouldnt we say Outer Space is the Limit!!!!???
"The sky is NOT the limit" is what stupid people mean to say, but they're too stupid to know any better.
The Moose Kicker wrote:
"The sky is NOT the limit" is what stupid people mean to say, but they're too stupid to know any better.
All that defines is that the SKY is not the limit. So that opens the door for the mailbox or a tree or my pants or anything BUT the sky to be the limit.
The limit is high.
e.g., "When it comes to your ignorance, the sky is the limit. "
It means you can't have the sky. Not sure why you'd want the sky any way.
old guy 69 wrote:
The sky is space
A popular myth. During the daytime the sky is made of water. If you know science, you know that's because the sun warms up and evaporates the water on Earth and it floats around way up high. That's why the sky is blue.
When the sun sets, the water falls down and there is nothing left up there so it looks like outer space, but it's not, it's actually just invisible and you can see the outer space behind it.
Now a critical mind may ask, why doesn't it always rain in the evening if the water falls down then. It's because rain is relatively rare on land. Usually the rain is blown sideways and falls next to the land, which is why there's a big ocean there.
LOL!It's the refractive index of particles in the atmosphere. Visible light in the blue wavelength range gets scattered during the day. As the sun sets there is a longer path for light to travel through so it hits more particles along the way. (i.e. a straight line from your eye to the sun passes through more air particles) and that's how you get your sunset.This is the simple explanation.Day #1 of physics: "Why is the sky blue."
Bad Wigins wrote:
old guy 69 wrote:The sky is space
A popular myth. During the daytime the sky is made of water. If you know science, you know that's because the sun warms up and evaporates the water on Earth and it floats around way up high. That's why the sky is blue.
When the sun sets, the water falls down and there is nothing left up there so it looks like outer space, but it's not, it's actually just invisible and you can see the outer space behind it.
Now a critical mind may ask, why doesn't it always rain in the evening if the water falls down then. It's because rain is relatively rare on land. Usually the rain is blown sideways and falls next to the land, which is why there's a big ocean there.
How should I know? I'm still trying to figure what "Fvck her right in the pvssy." is supposed to mean.