Can't be. I look at the number twice. Confirm + chop that's my number.Originally posted by mr_sotong:see wrongly? doppleganger?
For what sia?Originally posted by Mospeada:maybe u are trying to call urself in the future?
What is doppleganger?Originally posted by mr_sotong:then confirm plus chop is doppleganger..![]()
maybe to tell u that u will be winning 4D this weekend lehOriginally posted by ndmmxiaomayi:For what sia?
Yup. Once.Originally posted by ndmmxiaomayi:Just received a phone call. From the Caller ID, I could see that it's my own phone number.
Has this happen to anyone before?
I never pick up the phone though... it sounds ridiculous to.![]()
Forget it, I found out.Originally posted by ndmmxiaomayi:What is doppleganger?
A doppelgänger is the ghostly—in some cases, the physical—double of a living person. The word "doppelgänger" is a loanword from German, in which language it is written (as with any German noun) with an initial capital letter: Doppelgänger. The word derives from Doppel ("double") and Gänger ("goer").Originally posted by ndmmxiaomayi:What is doppleganger?
Don't want.Originally posted by sermodabian:Shd pick it up and hear whats on the other side...
Did you pick it up?Originally posted by DeadPoet:Yup. Once.![]()
wa lauz...stop scaring her leh...Originally posted by leo-kun:the caller only called once??
if call again pick up and see who is on the oher line
you might heard your own voice and say 'i know what you done last summer'![]()
I not old enough to play 4D.Originally posted by Mospeada:maybe to tell u that u will be winning 4D this weekend leh
do you mean doppelgænger instead of doppelgaenger?Originally posted by mr_sotong:A doppelgänger is the ghostly—in some cases, the physical—double of a living person. The word "doppelgänger" is a loanword from German, in which language it is written (as with any German noun) with an initial capital letter: Doppelgänger. The word derives from Doppel ("double") and Gänger ("goer").
In English, the word is conventionally uncapitalized. It is also common to drop the German diacritic umlaut from the letter "ä," writing "doppelganger," although in German the correct spelling without the umlaut would be "doppelgaenger."
In the vernacular, "Doppelgänger" has come to refer to any double or look-alike of a person—most commonly an "evil twin"—or to bilocation.
The word is also used to describe a phenomenon whereby one catches his own image out of the corner of his eye. In some traditions, seeing one's own doppelgänger is an omen of death. A doppelgänger seen by a person's friends or relatives may sometimes bring bad luck, or indicate an approaching health problem.