ldo derives from "lecking dockoumintd obgectieon," a Middle English phrase first found in a London newspaper in 1465. In rowdy pubs, when a drunkard would make a claim that was so obvious that no one in the world had ever disagreed, it was tradition for the other patrons of the pub to repeatedly chant "LECKING DOCKOUMINTED OBGECTIEON" and beat the drunkard with their walking canes.
ldo derives from "lecking dockoumintd obgectieon," a Middle English phrase first found in a London newspaper in 1465. In rowdy pubs, when a drunkard would make a claim that was so obvious that no one in the world had ever disagreed, it was tradition for the other patrons of the pub to repeatedly chant "LECKING DOCKOUMINTED OBGECTIEON" and beat the drunkard with their walking canes.
ldo derives from "lecking dockoumintd obgectieon," a Middle English phrase first found in a London newspaper in 1465. In rowdy pubs, when a drunkard would make a claim that was so obvious that no one in the world had ever disagreed, it was tradition for the other patrons of the pub to repeatedly chant "LECKING DOCKOUMINTED OBGECTIEON" and beat the drunkard with their walking canes.