NY/NJ BS THREAD
lol no biggie hun.......
I got home a lil while ago...went out for a couple of hrs and went on 2 dates and came back.....it is now 1:48am and im slowly getting sleepy
hows things ova in jerz? and NY......
Yuli what part of LI are u from again? I 4got
I got home a lil while ago...went out for a couple of hrs and went on 2 dates and came back.....it is now 1:48am and im slowly getting sleepy
hows things ova in jerz? and NY......Yuli what part of LI are u from again? I 4got
Originally Posted by tcmami
mete looks good in anything hahaaaa
lol
let me stop before Los comes and thinks im flirting
let me stop before Los comes and thinks im flirting
ma bad Konrad..im not like that....it's just new to me...no disrespect!
i hate when ppl judge and make fun of ____ like that...anyway ...welcome aboard.....only rule of this thread is "you need to stay ON topic" and the topic of the thread is "OFF topic" so good luck, enjoy and remember.....ON!
i hate when ppl judge and make fun of ____ like that...anyway ...welcome aboard.....only rule of this thread is "you need to stay ON topic" and the topic of the thread is "OFF topic" so good luck, enjoy and remember.....ON!
Originally Posted by Big_Bird
Originally Posted by tcmami
mete looks good in anything hahaaaa
lol
let me stop before Los comes and thinks im flirting
let me stop before Los comes and thinks im flirting
and double post on Konrad!
"T-scores are standardized scores on each dimension for each type. A score of 50 represents the mean. A difference of 10 from the mean indicates a difference of one standard deviation. Thus, a score of 60 is one standard deviation above the mean, while a score of 30 is two standard deviations below the mean."
Originally Posted by 1GreeKtC
"T-scores are standardized scores on each dimension for each type. A score of 50 represents the mean. A difference of 10 from the mean indicates a difference of one standard deviation. Thus, a score of 60 is one standard deviation above the mean, while a score of 30 is two standard deviations below the mean."







