Normally, when a noun and participle are used as a compound adjective they're hyphenated in front of the noun but not elsewhere, e.g., "The cock-teased man was frustrated by the cock tease." It looks like the preferred American use is cock tease and British is cock-tease, but the Brits are very promiscuous with hyphens. Both cock-tease and cocktease are alternates.
See, I knew Ginger could make it sound all knowledge-y!
Cagney dressed for work.
adorable!!! look at those ears!!
How to Dance Goth: [link]
"Your friend is not worthy of a cappucino."
I do a variant of the "So many, many webs" one. With more twirling. I'm kind of sad the video didn't include the ever-popular
we don't care what everyone ELSE is doing, WE'RE waltzing.
(And yes, StuntHusband and I are guilty of that.)
I'm running around doing errands today, including buying a dress to wear to vw's wedding.
oh yay for vw's wedding!
And ... no idea how to classify this.
Are there brick and mortar retailers that sell Nubar?