Trips are getting her nudes!
Sup Forums challenge
Trips are getting her nudes!
Sup Forums challenge
Okay
trips nudes eh ?? i has !!
roll
Name?
How old?
ROLL
re-roll
Eva, 18
rlly
Not sure how this works but I'm in
Chek em or kek em.
why don't you just post them retard
Well gimme gimme
roll
Roll
oh im sure OP will deliver.
Phone # plox
T
Roulle
hi
Cumbucket
Roll 4 dis
Nychkb
Nuuuudessssssss
comment
pussy
:(
Weyyy looks like HUUUGE boobs
( • )( • )
NUUUDDDEEESSSSS
Roll
I just wanna rolly rolly rolly
RE-ROLL
Droppin those pantys
TELL HER TO SPREAD THOSE LEGS. RE ROLL.
ay
So closs
rollex
Teddy Rollsevelt
Rullleee
Do it!
hitler was my favorite Asian food
Come on, babe. Need them noodz.
Lets git em
Rolling...
please daddy
Go
777 do me good
Wait. Was this trips? O_O
Rollllll
777777
So close....
FUUUUUUUU
Roll
Ffs
show boob n vegen pls
ROLL GOD DAMN IT. THERE'S NOODZ AT STAKE!!
fuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuck
Rol
Re-roll
gibmedat
one last try
Boom
Rollin
keep on rollin
roll
Gimme da pousy plz.
Re-roll again
Check em lads
i am chosen
Garry needs a new pair of shoes
ROLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOL
Reroll
Fuuuuuck
ROLL!!
why is this game so hard
LOLOL
rolladex
rollllll
RLL
bam motherfuckers
winrar
Eyyyy
HERE IS YOUR TRIPS!
GIMME THAT PUSSY. ROLL, YOU FUCKS.
Damn
God damn it, why.
Kek
I'm so dead inside. Rolling times infinity.
where's my fucking nudes!!!
Destiny
Roll
Top kek.
I like noods too
It's a lie!
Shit is a word considered vulgar and profane in Modern English. As a noun, it refers to fecal matter, and as a verb it means to defecate; in the plural ("the shits"), it means diarrhoea. Shite is a common variant in British and Irish English.[1] As a slang term, it has many meanings, including: nonsense, foolishness, something of little value or quality, trivial and usually boastful or inaccurate talk or a contemptible person. It could also be used to refer to any other noun in general or as an expression of annoyance, surprise or anger.
The word is likely derived from Old English, having the nouns scite (dung, attested only in place names) and scitte (diarrhoea) and the verb scītan (to defecate, attested only in bescītan, to cover with excrement); eventually it morphed into Middle English schītte (excrement), schyt (diarrhoea) and shiten (to defecate), and it is virtually certain that it was used in some form by preliterate Germanic tribes at the time of the Roman Empire. The word may be further traced to Proto-Germanic *skit-, and ultimately to Proto-Indo-European *skheid- "cut, separate", the same root believed to have become the word shed. The word has several cognates in modern Germanic languages, such as German Scheiße, Dutch schijt, Swedish skit, Icelandic skítur, Norwegian skitt etc. Ancient Greek had 'skōr' (gen. 'skatos' hence 'scato-'), from Proto-Indo-European *sker-, which is likely unrelated.[2]
The word shit (also shite in British and Hiberno-English) is usually avoided in formal speech. Minced oath substitutes for the word shit in English include shoot, shucks, and sugar.
In the word's literal sense, it has a rather small range of common usages. An unspecified or collective occurrence of feces is generally shit or some shit; a single deposit of feces is sometimes a shit or a piece of shit; and to defecate is to shit or to take a shit. While it is common to speak of shit as existing in a pile, a load, a hunk, and other quantities and configur