![]() |
No items matching your keywords were found.
![]() |
No items matching your keywords were found.
Rare One Kind

The doctor said i have a rare tumor on my leg, but i dont know the name of it, it starts w/ the letter C?
all the doctors in 2 offices looked at my x-rays and no one knew what it was and then one doctor said its some kind of rare tumor in my leg and it starts with the letter C, can someone give me a list of every tumor that starts with the letter C please?
Get your doctor to spell it for you. It's the only way to be sure.
![]() |
No items matching your keywords were found.
![]() |
No items matching your keywords were found.
![]() |
No items matching your keywords were found.
![]() |
No items matching your keywords were found.
| | One Of A Kind - $12.99 One Of A Kind - |
| | One of a Kind $59.99 One of a Kind - Wall Decal |
| | Be One of a Kind $9.99 Elizabeth Medley Be One of a Kind - Art Print |
| | One-of-a-Kind Handmade Weddings: $13.15 One-of-a-Kind Handmade Weddings |
| | One Of My Kind $13.49 One Of My Kind |
| | One Kind Favor $9.99 One Kind Favor |
| | Be Kind to One Another $59.99 Kay Draper Be Kind to One Another - Wall Decal |
| Account limit of 2104 requests per hour exceeded. |
Fallout 3 Rare One of a Kind Clothing Little Lamplight
Don't Confuse Rare Yugioh Cards for Rare Yugioh Cards
Did I lose you at the title? If you stick with me a little bit, I'll explain. Rarity for yugioh cards is relative. Based on what a card does will actually affect how rare it really becomes in the market. First, there are basically two types of people who buy yugioh cards. The first is the player. Every single time a new yugioh set comes out, a player will go through the yugioh card list for the set and determine which cards will be beneficial to him. The second type is the collector. The collector collects according to his or her preference. Some collectors collect only the rare yugioh cards, while some collect the entire set. I'm a bit of both, I like collecting rare foil yugioh cards and using them to build a deck.
Although both the player and collector can affect the value of any one yugioh card, the player has greater influence on card value of a current tournament legal card. In short, if the card is playable in a tournament, then the player affects the value more than a collector. Another reason collectors don't affect value as much is because they often just buy one copy of a particular yugioh card. Whereas the player will buy multiple copies of a rare yugioh card to complete the deck.
Now, yugioh cards are classified by the manufacturer based on the ratio of each print run and how much of each classification is placed in a single yugioh booster pack. There are eight common cards in every nine-card yugioh booster pack. One of the nine will be a rare. Sometimes, that rare is replaced by a higher rarity kind of card. In yugioh, there are super rare yugioh cards and ultra rare yugioh cards. There is one super rare in every six booster packs and there is one ultra rare in every twelve booster packs. These are just the numbers based on the print run. It doesn't mean that if you buy twelve booster packs, then you're guaranteed an ultra rare yugioh card.
When you're trading your yugioh cards to either complete your collection or your deck, keep this mind. Not all rare, super rare or ultra rare cards are useful to a player. What this means is that the rare cards that don't show up in tournament decks are easier to trade for when you're trading with a player. On the flip side, a rare card that's playable might be easily traded for when you are trading with a collector. The rarity of a yugioh card depends on the trader's perception. Some players even trade away super rare cards to get a few rare cards that they need for their tournament deck. So the next time you're looking to complete your yugioh card collection or tournament deck, find out if the trader is a player or a collector. From there, you'll know the differences between a "rare" yugioh card and a rare yugioh card.
About the Author
Caleb McLellan is an avid gamer and hobby writer. Aside from actively trading yugioh cards , he also teaches new hobbyists in his local game shop. He's been known to be a fan of foil rare yugioh cards and loves building all foil decks for tournaments.
RSS Feed


Posted in
Tags: 
@Gay Christian Communist 4 JESUS:
We do see several species of human. We, Homo Sapians are just the only ones left. Others included Neanderthals Cro Magnums etc.
Well, it seems intuitively obvious that relationships only work when both people are happy, not only just one person in the relationship. Also, having some things in common does help to build a relationship, especially in the initial stages, but people differ on how much they need the other person to be just like them.
I think it's also true that when people are dating, they try to optimize the various qualities they're looking for in a partner. So given the choice between partner A, B, or C, they'll choose the one person that most meets the qualities they're looking for. This also seems intuitively obvious to me.
However, when you make the commitment, and marry someone, you're supposed to stop looking. After you're married, you're not supposed to drop your spouse when you find someone that is newer and better than your spouse. Of course, this doesn't always happen, but that is the idea behind marriage and having a real committment to that marriage. Also, the commitment of marriage means that you'll stay with your partner, even if the times are occasionally bad…. Although I do think everyone has their limits for how much "bad" in a marriage they can tolerate, but the idea is that you're supposed to try to stick it out as much as you can, and not just give up at the first sign of trouble.
As for the reasons that marriages break up, I would change your first reason and keep the second reason. 1) I think the first reason is more generally the marriage started off for the wrong reasons. Perhaps the couple got married because there was a pregnancy. Perhaps the couple got together due to lust, and stuck together for a while, then got married because they thought that was the natural next step in a relationship, without giving much thought to what else they were committing to. Perhaps one person gave up on finding the right person for them, and "settled" for whoever would say yes, only to later regret that decision. Perhaps the couple got married impulsively, without giving much thought to the committment they were making. I'm sure there are many wrong reasons for getting married, but that list is a good start. In all of these cases, the marriage has trouble withstanding any difficulty, because there is no committment and no foundation for the marriage to stand on.
2. If the marriage got started for the right reasons, it's still possible for the marriage to break up later. Years down the road, life's experiences do change people. People respond to things differently. It is possible, though not desirable, for two people to grow apart, instead of together, and in that case, the marriage may fail. I think it is possible to bridge these differences, but that may not always happen… After all, it takes two people to make a marriage work, and if only one person is willing to bridge the gap, it's not going to work.