u ever fap about a nasty foid?

Ritalincel

Ritalincel

💢
Joined
Oct 20, 2018
Posts
89,991
Reputation
147,585
u ever fap about a nasty foid u ?
 
  • +1
Reactions: Marsiere214, ChoSeungHui, Swagwaffle and 1 other person
Yeah. I fap to butterface nude selfies that I find on the internet.
 
  • +1
Reactions: Butthurt Dweller, ChoSeungHui, Swagwaffle and 2 others
tenor.gif
 
  • +1
Reactions: itsoverbuddyboyo, AspiringChad, RichardSpencel and 2 others
define nasty
 
  • +1
Reactions: Insomniac and Swagwaffle
don't remember, but if i did then it was a butterfaced jb taking a selfie
 
  • +1
Reactions: Vitruvian, Insomniac, Swagwaffle and 1 other person
My thread was copyrighted u are now receiving a copyright strike
 
  • Woah
  • +1
Reactions: Dude420 and Insomniac
define nasty

nasty
/ˈnɑːsti/
adjective
adjective: nasty; comparative adjective: nastier; superlative adjective: nastiest

  1. very bad or unpleasant.
    "plastic bags burn with a nasty, acrid smell"
    synonyms: unpleasant, disagreeable, disgusting, distasteful, awful, dreadful, horrible, terrible, vile, foul, abominable, frightful, loathsome, revolting, repulsive, odious, sickening, nauseating, nauseous, repellent, repugnant, horrendous, hideous, appalling, atrocious, offensive, objectionable, obnoxious, unpalatable, unsavoury, unappetizing, off-putting, uninviting, dirty, filthy, squalid;
    antonyms: nice, delightful, lovely, pleasant, slight, minor

  • (of the weather) unpleasantly cold or wet.
    "it's a nasty old night"
    synonyms: unpleasant, disagreeable, foul, filthy, inclement; More
    antonyms: fine, sunny


  • repugnant to the mind.
    "her stories are very nasty, full of murder and violence"

  1. behaving in an unpleasant or spiteful way.
    "Harry was a nasty, foul-mouthed old devil"
    synonyms: unkind, unpleasant, unfriendly, disagreeable, inconsiderate, uncharitable, rude, churlish, spiteful, malicious, mean, mean-spirited, ill-tempered, ill-natured, ill-humoured, bad-tempered, hostile, vicious, malevolent, evil-minded, surly, obnoxious, poisonous, venomous, vindictive, malign, malignant, cantankerous, hateful, hurtful, cruel, wounding, abusive; More
    antonyms: charming, agreeable, nice, likeable

  • annoying or unwelcome.
    "life has a nasty habit of repeating itself"
    synonyms: annoying, irritating, infuriating, unwelcome, disagreeable, unpleasant, unfortunate, maddening, exasperating, irksome, vexing, vexatious; More


  • damaging or harmful.
    "a nasty, vicious-looking hatchet"
nounINFORMAL
noun: nasty; plural noun: nasties
1.
an unpleasant or harmful person or thing.
"a water conditioner to neutralize chlorine and other nasties"
a horror video or film.
 
  • +1
Reactions: Marsiere214, AspiringChad and Insomniac
nasty BBW FOIDS TURN ME ON
 
  • WTF
  • +1
Reactions: Marsiere214 and itsoverbuddyboyo
nasty BBW FOIDS TURN ME ON
I fap to pale white, fat, big tit bitch pornos sometimes. After I cum I'm like, "woah, wtf did I just watch"
 
  • +1
  • JFL
Reactions: Marsiere214, itsoverbuddyboyo and Swagwaffle
nasty
/ˈnɑːsti/
adjective
adjective: nasty; comparative adjective: nastier; superlative adjective: nastiest

  1. very bad or unpleasant.
    "plastic bags burn with a nasty, acrid smell"
    synonyms: unpleasant, disagreeable, disgusting, distasteful, awful, dreadful, horrible, terrible, vile, foul, abominable, frightful, loathsome, revolting, repulsive, odious, sickening, nauseating, nauseous, repellent, repugnant, horrendous, hideous, appalling, atrocious, offensive, objectionable, obnoxious, unpalatable, unsavoury, unappetizing, off-putting, uninviting, dirty, filthy, squalid;
    antonyms: nice, delightful, lovely, pleasant, slight, minor

  • (of the weather) unpleasantly cold or wet.
    "it's a nasty old night"
    synonyms: unpleasant, disagreeable, foul, filthy, inclement; More
    antonyms: fine, sunny


  • repugnant to the mind.
    "her stories are very nasty, full of murder and violence"

  1. behaving in an unpleasant or spiteful way.
    "Harry was a nasty, foul-mouthed old devil"
    synonyms: unkind, unpleasant, unfriendly, disagreeable, inconsiderate, uncharitable, rude, churlish, spiteful, malicious, mean, mean-spirited, ill-tempered, ill-natured, ill-humoured, bad-tempered, hostile, vicious, malevolent, evil-minded, surly, obnoxious, poisonous, venomous, vindictive, malign, malignant, cantankerous, hateful, hurtful, cruel, wounding, abusive; More
    antonyms: charming, agreeable, nice, likeable

  • annoying or unwelcome.
    "life has a nasty habit of repeating itself"
    synonyms: annoying, irritating, infuriating, unwelcome, disagreeable, unpleasant, unfortunate, maddening, exasperating, irksome, vexing, vexatious; More


  • damaging or harmful.
    "a nasty, vicious-looking hatchet"
nounINFORMAL
noun: nasty; plural noun: nasties
1.
an unpleasant or harmful person or thing.
"a water conditioner to neutralize chlorine and other nasties"
a horror video or film.
Dictionarycel
55941
 
  • +1
  • Love it
Reactions: itsoverbuddyboyo, ChoSeungHui and Swagwaffle
reported
/rɪˈpɔːtɪd/
adjective
  1. having been formally or officially announced or described.
    "an increase in reported crime"
    • described or talked of, but not verified or confirmed.
      adjective: reported
      "he's now a reported $50,000 in debt"





report
/rɪˈpɔːt/
verb
past tense: reported; past participle: reported
  1. 1.
    give a spoken or written account of something that one has observed, heard, done, or investigated.
    "the minister reported a decline in milk production"
    synonyms:announce, describe, give an account of, tell of, detail, delineate, outline; More
    communicate, pass on, relay;
    divulge, disclose, reveal;
    make public, publish, circulate, set out, set forth, put out, post, broadcast;
    blazon, herald, proclaim, declare, publicize, promulgate;
    document, record, chronicle;
    formaladumbrate
    "the government reported the biggest fall in manufacturing output since 1981"
    • cover an event or subject as a journalist or a reporter.
      "the public disliked the way that the media reported on the scandal"
      synonyms:investigate, look into, inquire into, survey, research, study; More
      write about, write an account of, broadcast details of, cover, describe, give details of, write up;
      commentate on
      "many magazines happily report on the titillating activities of the stars"
    • used to indicate that something has been stated, although one cannot confirm its accuracy.
      "hoaxers are reported to be hacking into airline frequencies to impersonate air traffic controllers"
    • make a formal statement or complaint about (someone or something) to the necessary authority.
      "undisclosed illegalities are reported to the company's directors"
      synonyms:make a complaint against, make a charge against, inform on, tattle on, accuse; More
      informalblow the whistle on, grass on, shop, tell on, squeal on, rat on, split on, peach on;
      raredelate on
      "I reported him to the police"
    • BRITISH
      (of a parliamentary committee chairman) formally announce that the committee has dealt with (a bill).
      "the Chairman shall report the Bill to the House"
    • US
      (of a committee of Congress) return a bill to the legislative body for action.
      "the Committee reported out the Civil Rights Bill, quicker than ever expected"
  2. 2.
    present oneself formally as having arrived at a particular place or as ready to do something.
    "he had to report to the headmaster at 4 pm"
    synonyms:present oneself, arrive, appear, turn up, clock in, sign in; More
    make oneself known, announce oneself, come, be present;
    clock on;
    punch in, punch the (time) clock;
    informalshow up
    "Juliet reported for duty at 8.30"
    • return to work or duty after a period of absence.
      "hearing that there was the prospect of action with No. 8 Commando, he reported back for duty"
  3. 3.
    be responsible to (a superior or supervisor).
    "he reports to the chairman of the committee"
Origin
37f853b88f94ffc3e44e55b3034387dcc8ca2000405dbf0de8d49d69d562b142.png

late Middle English: from Old French reporter (verb), report (noun), from Latin reportare ‘bring back’, from re-‘back’ + portare ‘carry’. The sense ‘give an account’ gave rise to ‘submit a formal report’, hence ‘inform an authority of one's presence’ (report (sense 2 of the verb), mid 19th century) and ‘be accountable to a superior’ (report (sense 3 of the verb), late 19th century).
 
  • +1
  • WTF
Reactions: itsoverbuddyboyo and Swagwaffle
accountsilenced.png
 
  • +1
Reactions: ChoSeungHui
yes because its more realistic
 
  • +1
Reactions: Ritalincel and Swagwaffle
yes because its more realistic
 
  • +1
Reactions: Ritalincel
Nasty personality or looks?
 

Similar threads

sickdawgie
Replies
0
Views
40
sickdawgie
sickdawgie
Sub0
Replies
45
Views
493
Sub0
Sub0
ey88
Replies
2
Views
136
ripper
ripper
try2beme
Replies
24
Views
276
romanstock
romanstock
alurmo
Replies
20
Views
217
alurmo
alurmo

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top