My fingers are much the same way. Course I haven't really worn rings for any real length of time in forever, so I don't know if they would get annoying.Dags90 said:Grr. Last post got eaten by forum fail.
I can't really wear rings. My fingers are pretty thin and my knuckles are noticeably wider than them. So anything that fits behind my knuckle moves around a lot and is generally irritating.
See below:
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same, do you crack your knuckles? Thats what people say caused mineDags90 said:Grr. Last post got eaten by forum fail.
I can't really wear rings. My fingers are pretty thin and my knuckles are noticeably wider than them. So anything that fits behind my knuckle moves around a lot and is generally irritating.
See below:
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No, I don't even know how to do it. It never actually works for me.ezeroast said:same, do you crack your knuckles? Thats what people say caused mine
This is thread win. Very thread win.Hashime said:Engineers wear iron rings on their pinky finger. They are the engineer equivalent of a stethoscope.
Yes, I am a wizard. *strokes long white beard*Nyan Cat said:I wear thumbs rings. :3Everin said:In Australia the left ring finger with a ring on it represents both the engagement and also the marriage, so people know they're taken.
But I swear pinky finger rings represent you are a pimp, just sayin'.
Does anyone where thumb rings anymore?
Funnily enough, it's been about a year since I got these rings... Are you a wizard?Raineheart said:Thumb rings are a sign of strength or leadership, some such like that anyway. Interestingly enough, I found that out a year after I started wearing my two rings on my thumbs.
Oh, I know the answer to this one. The answer is...SilentCom said:Ring + Finger = ???
Is that why cock rings exist? (I'm kidding, btw. I know what they're for.)L3m0n_L1m3 said:Well, if you like something, you put a ring on it.
Did those civilisations know that the brain was used for back then? I was under the impression it took a while for humanity to figure out. The heart being the organ for intelligence used to be pretty popular, I understand.lisadagz said:The wedding ring finger - finger next to your little finger on the left hand - is supposed to have been believed by ancient Romans and Egyptians to have had a major vein running from it straight to the heart.
I've also heard that they believed that the same finger on your right hand is the king ring finger, the finger that kings would wear their signet ring on, because the same ancient civilisations believed there was a major vein running from that finger straight to the brain.
Unfortunately I can't find anything about the second one on Google, I don't know if that's due to it being incorrect or just that people are far too preoccupied with the first piece of information for me to be able to filter anything out about another kind of ring finger or special vein.
The Greeks, who thought thought originated in the heart, believed the spleen to be the seat of emotion.Mad Scientist said:Did those civilisations know that the brain was used for back then? I was under the impression it took a while for humanity to figure out. The heart being the organ for intelligence used to be pretty popular, I understand.
That's neat. I guess if it were to become common knowledge, what would probably happen is people would start wearing them if they just got out of a major relationship or aren't wanting to get picked up on a night out (much like straight women hanging out at gay bars), so it'd lose that specific meaning, but it'd still be a good indicator of where a person stands at that time.Mad Scientist said:A black ring on the middle finger of one's right hand signifies asexuality. But this is a fairly new symbol and there are probably a lot of people out there wearing it not for that reason, but because they like black rings, so I'm not sure how useful that is.
It's pretty gay not because of how it looks or it's abilities, but rather it's weakness. Any jerk-ass with a can of yellow spray paint makes it powerless, as I understand it. If this is incorrect, please feel free to educate me =)Abandon4093 said:Irony, you said you bother about 'function over fashion'. Yet would consider not wearing the most functional ring in all of fiction because it's 'kinda gay'?Ganthrinor said:Stuff I said
The problem of course being that it'd need to gain prominence as an asexual signifier first, and aces are 1% of the population. Then you have subsets that hate jewellery, think the ring thing is stupid, are in the closet, or just aren't interested enough in proclaiming their sexuality to random strangers to go out and buy a ring for it. Which doesn't leave a population density high enough to give it any publically recognised meaning.lisadagz said:That's neat. I guess if it were to become common knowledge, what would probably happen is people would start wearing them if they just got out of a major relationship or aren't wanting to get picked up on a night out (much like straight women hanging out at gay bars), so it'd lose that specific meaning, but it'd still be a good indicator of where a person stands at that time.Mad Scientist said:A black ring on the middle finger of one's right hand signifies asexuality. But this is a fairly new symbol and there are probably a lot of people out there wearing it not for that reason, but because they like black rings, so I'm not sure how useful that is.
Do you also have one ring to find them?thrillingsuspense said:I wear one ring to rule them all.
Ooo, piano fingers. I is got them too, but I still wear rings (one on left thumb, one on left ring finger). Don't know what placement's supposed to signify, but nor do I particularly care so *shrug*.Dags90 said:Grr. Last post got eaten by forum fail.
I can't really wear rings. My fingers are pretty thin and my knuckles are noticeably wider than them. So anything that fits behind my knuckle moves around a lot and is generally irritating.
See below:
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