vocabulary
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fydokyungsoo:160220 studio_b1: #highcut #D.O. #디오
Not the broadest vocabulary, but points for marking up the slut fairly well. “Whore. Cunt. Bitch. Cunt. Cunt. Cunt. Slut. Cunt.”
emmathecumdump:For anon :) Looks like a bit of new vocabulary for us. Here’s to anon!“Fat Udders. Pot Belly Bitch.”
nighorforlife: rapedollswanted: 123abcrrr: What was that? Did I just fucking hear ‘No’? Here, let me remove that word from your vocabulary, whore. You gave up being able to say no when you became mine little whore. No
UNFFFFF… i should get a larger vocabulary
Your chances of survival are better if you learn the local dialect ;)
Another excuse to expand your vocabulary
A powerful vocabulary is a powerful tool
Word of the Day: Oracular
Word List: Alternatives to "Whisper" (Amended)
fakevermeer: Test Your Vocabulary: how many words do you know? Most Native English adult speakers who have taken the test fall in the range 20,000–35,000 words. And for foreign learners of English, we’ve found that the most common vocabulary
thisisminorityprivilege: It’s a black privilege to use the “N” wordto use it, to maintain it in the speaking vocabulary and then complain about … its presence in the speaking vocabulary. I must be the most racist man in the world, but my definition
Nouveau Vocabulaire :)
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Juxtaposition is sexy. So is a large vocabulary. Thus I will not elaborate further. The number of notes this gets will be indicative of the collective vocabulary of my followers.
living-consciously: Are you sad of knowing many kids and other people are hungry right now but you don’t know how to actually do something to help? Improve your vocabulary and fight world hunger! Free Rice donates 10 grains of rice for every vocabulary
redmacha: truebluemeandyou: DIY Guide to Fashion Terms and Wedding Dresses storymixmedia. For my most popular style infogaphics go here: Fashion Pattern Vocabulary Part 1 Infographic. Fashion Pattern Vocabulary Part 2 Infographic. Know Your Sunglasses
godtricksterloki: did-you-kno: Source Who cares? You vocabulary douches. Words get added all the time, deal with it cunts.
victoriousvocabulary: TROUVAILLE [noun] 1. a lucky find. 2. an ingenious idea. Etymology: from Old French trouver - to compose, find. [Victo Ngai - Deep Thinkers]
victoriousvocabulary: PROBITY [noun] integrity of character; complete and confirmed integrity; uprightness. Etymology: from Latin probitās (honesty), from probus (virtuous). [Sir Joseph Noel Paton- Sir Galahad]
victoriousvocabulary: ANGELOPHANY [noun] the appearance of an angel or angels; manifestation of a celestial being. Etymology: angel, from Old English engel or Old French angele, both from Late Latin angelus, ultimately derived from Late Greek angelos
victoriousvocabulary: APRICITY [noun] 1. the warmth of the sun. 2. the warmth of the sun during Winter. Etymology: from the Latin aprīcitās, noun of quality from aprīcus (“warmed by the sun”). [Vladimir Kush]
victoriousvocabulary: MALAPERT [adjective] 1. impudently bold; saucy; amusingly forward and flippant. [noun] 2. an impudent, saucy person. Etymology: Middle English, from Old French, mal-, “not“ + apert, “clever” . [Marta de Andrés]
victoriousvocabulary: SUBLIME [adjective] 1. of high moral, aesthetic, intellectual, or spiritual value; noble; exalted. 2. inspiring deep veneration, awe, or uplifting emotion because of its beauty, nobility, grandeur, or immensity. 3. unparalleled;
victoriousvocabulary: GENEALOGY [noun] 1. a record or account of the ancestry and descent of a person, family, group, etc. 2. the study of family ancestries and histories. 3. descent from an original form or progenitor; lineage; ancestry. 4. Biology:
victoriousvocabulary: DAMNOSA HEREDITAS [noun] 1. Roman Law: an inheritance from a person who dies insolvent and whose debts the heir is bound to discharge. 2. a harmful or burdensome inheritance. Etymology: from Latin, literally “damaging inheritance”.
victoriousvocabulary: RUFFIAN [noun] 1. a tough or rowdy person. 2. a thug or gangster; a violent or lawless person; hoodlum or villain. Etymology: from Old French rufien, from Italian ruffiano, perhaps related to Langobardic hruf - scurf, scabbiness.
victoriousvocabulary: JĪNYÚ [noun] Chinese: 金鱼 – goldfish; a freshwater cyprinid fish, Carassius auratus, of Eastern Europe and Asia, especially China, widely introduced as a pond or aquarium fish. It resembles the carp and has a typically golden
victoriousvocabulary: NOCTURNE [noun] 1. Visual Arts: a piece appropriate to the night or evening; a picture of the night scene. 2. Music: an instrumental composition of a dreamy or pensive character. 3. Music: a short composition of a romantic nature,
victoriousvocabulary: THALASSOCRACY [noun] dominion over the seas, as in as in exploration, trade, or colonisation. Etymology: from Attic Greek thalassocratia, from thalassa, “sea” + -cracy, from -kratia, from kratos, “power”. [TheMinttu -
victoriousvocabulary: DELUGE [noun] 1. a great flood of water; inundation; flood. 2. a drenching rain; downpour. 3. anything that overwhelms like a flood. [verb] 4. to flood; inundate. 5. to overrun; overwhelm. Etymology: from Old French, from Latin
victoriousvocabulary: GRIPULOUS [adjective] grasping; greedy. Etymology: grip (Middle English, from Old English gripe, “grasp” and gripa, “handful”) + -ulous (a suffix occurring in adjectives borrowed from Latin, with the meaning “inclined
victoriousvocabulary: GELID [adjective] extremely cold; icy. Etymology: from Latin gelidus, ”icy cold”, equivalent to gel(um), “frost, cold”. [Zaria Forman]
victoriousvocabulary: REGINAL [noun] 1. queen. 2. the official title of a queen. [adjective] 3. of or relating to a queen; queenly. Etymology: ultimately from Latin rēgīna. [a-hour - Mother of Dragons]
victoriousvocabulary: VETUST [adjective] venerable from antiquity; ancient; old. Etymology: from Latin vetustus “old, ancient”. [backji]
victoriousvocabulary: PUCELAGE [noun] 1. Archaic: virginity - the state of never having had sexual intercourse. 2. Colloquial: innocence - freedom from guilt or wrongdoing. Etymology: from Middle French pucelage, from pucelle > Old French pucele,
victoriousvocabulary: DEVALL [verb] to sink; to decline. Etymology: from Middle English devalen “to descend, sink”, from Middle French devaler, from (assumed) Vulgar Latin devallare, from Latin de “down, away” + (assumed) -vallare, from Latin
victoriousvocabulary: SCHWUNGVOLL [adjective] lively, swinging, bold, spirited, jauntily. Etymology: German, schwung “momentum, swing” + voll, “full”. [Cyril Rolando]
victoriousvocabulary: CENTRIFUGAL [adjective] 1. moving or directed away from a centre or axis. 2. operated by means of centrifugal force. 3. Physiology: transmitting nerve impulses away from the central nervous system; efferent. 4. Botany: developing
victoriousvocabulary: ĆMA [noun] 1. Polish: moth; a chiefly nocturnal insect related to the butterflies. 2. Archaic: darkness. Etymology: from Proto-Slavic *tьma. [Miranda Meeks]
victoriousvocabulary: IRRGARTEN [noun] maze; labyrinth; a knot garden; a complicated irregular network of passages or paths in which it is difficult to find one’s way. Etymology: German. [Dario Mekler]
victoriousvocabulary: MORIOR [verb] 1. to die, wither away, decay. 2. I die. 3. I wither; I decay. Etymology: Latin, from Proto-Indo-European *mer- “to die”. [noiaillustration]
AESC
victoriousvocabulary: VIAGEM [noun] a trip; journey; voyage; travel. Etymology: Portuguese, from Old Portuguese viagem, viagen, viage, from Old Provençal viatge, from Latin viaticum. [ebineyland]
capyshotas: fakevermeer: Test Your Vocabulary: how many words do you know? Most Native English adult speakers who have taken the test fall in the range 20,000–35,000 words. And for foreign learners of English, we’ve found that the most common
scipsy: Not so good, but since the most common vocabulary size for non-native English spearkes is from 2,500–9,000 words, at least I’m in the average. Test Your Vocabulary: how many words do you know? *tsk* I was hoping for higher. Guess I should
babblzoom: styleerotica: I have a really big vocabulary for someone who says fuck a lot, as I sometimes do, and for someone who hardly ever says fuck… I have a fucking brilliant vocabulary when I choose to use it *smirks*
brilziana:scipsy:Not so good, but since the most common vocabulary size for non-native English speakers is from 2,500–9,000 words, at least I’m in the average.Test Your Vocabulary: how many words do you know?You guys should definitely try this
Legit Word of the Day
truebluemeandyou: DIY Guide to Fashion Terms and Wedding Dresses from storymixmedia. For my most popular style infogaphics go here: Fashion Pattern Vocabulary Part 1 Infographic. Fashion Pattern Vocabulary Part 2 Infographic. Know Your Sunglasses
Fifty Shades of Grey uses really unnecessary and forced vocabulary. Like..a simple word would have sufficed, but she just wanted to shove a big word into the sentence to sound smart. Just no. “That was very profligate of you.” Oh, wait,
VOCABULARY SPILLS, SHE'S ILL.
Vocabulary is extremely important. That's why I am
Vocabulary list: Useful phrases for essay writing in Russian
carcinogenocider: words that have become part of my regular vocabulary dang holla gomen thank words i did not want to become part of my regular vocabulary dang holla gomen thank