Sox, if you see a couple at the beach with a wee Boston Terrier they're calling Miyagi, say "Hello!" for Sass, the DH and I.
Spike's Bitches 41: Thrown together to stand against the forces of darkness
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risqué (and frisqué), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
Happy Birthday, Teppy!!
I haz assbruise! AIFG!
Sox, I think you're channeling the birthday girl.
HAHHAHAH! That's AWESOME.
Jars, kitteh Pete is ADORABLE indeed.
this is going to sound very mean spirited in light of all teh hot but is GILF aware of your makeOutLikeTeenagers dates?
I have not mentioned them to her, though I have to others, but I don't think she is (she may vaguely be aware I've been on a few dates lately, but given that she's polyamorous and would not in any way expect or want monogamy, that wouldn't be an issue). Though it is, indeed, the sort of thing she'd do.
Happy Birthday, Teppy!!!
Happy Birthday, Teppy!
Happiest of happy Teppy days!!!
HAPPY BIRTHDAY BELOVED TEPPY!!!
Happy Birthday, Teppy!
I know there's a term for this dick-measuring point-scoring crap, but I can't think what it's called. Anyone?
Maybe "specious", which means plausible, but untrue.
Peeking my head in here to say:
Happy Birthday Teppy!
Happy Birthday, Teppy!
OK, so I'm writing a novel in which real historical figures feature prominently. Last night I decided to look up the earliest citation of a word in the OED (which I get online through the Seattle Public Library). I don't do that for every word, of course, but I'd already rejected two words for this particular concept because I knew they were too recent, so I wanted to be sure the one I'd settled on was OK. (Unlike "OK" itself, which is too modern for my characters by 30 years or so.)
Anyway, the second citation in the OED for my word was by...the very person who uses it in my story. Total researchgasm for me, though I have a feeling I'd draw nothing but blank stares if I tried to explain the utter coolness of this discovery to my coworkers during the chatty part of our staff meeting that's about to start.