Fly knife?
I mean, I googled it and the top result was the Wikipedia entry for Kunai, so… I guess it works?
Fly knife?
Knife fly
knifly
What can we learn from this?
Knives have the most dominant qualities and butter has the least dominant qualities out of these three objects
I still prefer butter
nah knives taste way better
though i guess we are together against flies, so that’s good
Fly gang represent
There they are!
But butter is the most likely to show up in the name.
That reminds of this interesting article on the order of words : https://www.bbc.com/culture/article/20160908-the-language-rules-we-know-but-dont-know-we-know
So is butter going to take over a nuclear weapons disposal facility?
Can someone explain the kunai intersection to me?
I’m not sure either, but when you google “fly knife” the kunai is the top result but the wiki page doesn’t mention t at all, maybe because it’s stereotypically a throwing (flying) knife?
I came to find the same thing. How does a butcher knife and a fly become a kunai?
That’s a chefs knife.
Chef’s knives and butcher knives are used interchangeably in my variant of the English language.
I would need to see an infographic on what differentiates them
Based on that infographic, yes, I mean a chefs knife, and I have never owned or held a butchers knife in my life.
Are you a butcher?
Based off the fact that I have never held a butcher’s knife in my entire life I would say the answer is no, I am not a butcher of anything other than the English language
Butcher’s knives tend to have a wider blade than chef’s knives. They have kind of converged in the states, but classically that is the difference.
Username checks out.
Butter + fly + knife = balisong
Aka buttefly knife
I balisang, balisong and will balisong
Fly knife
This should be used to teach venn diagrams
wat