Anonymous5: The wolf pulled out of her ASS, earlier he came in her PUSSY. Geez, illiteracy is everywhere. Also, I smell sequel! PLUS, lol at religibitch.
Anonymous7: were the fuck in that time could you have got a bannanna, because wasn't that like the 1800 or something, i'm talking a bout the banna in the cornwer of the last window.
slicerness: are you kidding anon10? she doesn't look like she's been raped in the last panel. she just looks cold. that look lacks fear. hell she looks happy in panel 3.
Anonymous13: Anon14 go blow a donkey you dumb cunt. It's "spelled" not "spelt", which isn't even a fucking word you moron. Is it too fucking hard to actually ATTEMPT to learn the English language before engaging in an argument? However you are correct in that bananas weren't common fare in that time frame. Thank you for confirming you are a homosexual for searching out temporally erroneous phallic objects when there are tits and ass to distract you. Good day to you sir.
Anonymous16: to anon 17 from anon 11, why yes i have happened to study up on the English language since we last talked, or rather wrote, but i didn't take it on your suggestion, i took it because my professor said something but i kinda forgot now, i think it was on how bad my writing had become, but i feel deeply honored to have a spotlight on me for a few fleeting seconds, so thank you anon 17 for giving the spotlight to me, and have a good day to you to. Signed: anon 11.
Anonymous19: Holy crap arguing anons, I haven't heard that kind of an immature bitch fest since I was in grade school. And EITHER of you claim to be remotely competent in English? I pity the fucking world.
Anonymous24: I normally wouldn't bother but I felt that I had to point this out to Anon 17.
In American English, spelt primarily refers to the hardy wheat grown mostly in Europe, and the verb spell makes spelled in the past tense and as a past participle. In all other main varieties of English, spelt and spelled both work as the past tense and past participle of spell, at least where spell means to form words letter by letter or (with out) to make clear. Outside the U.S., the two forms are interchangeable in these uses, and both are common.
To summarize, in all varieties of English spelt IS a word, and in proper (read not American unfortunately) English, it is the proper spelling of the past tense of spell.
fishmonger: @Anonymous: The fact that this is a porn site doesn't mean that people should act uneducated. "Normally, I would type 'Jolly amusing, kind sir.' But, since I'm on a porn site, I type 'top lel niggar!!!'" That's not how it should work.
Thumper: @Roflcakes: heh, I checked over there, somehow I used over 10 gigs of bandwidth this month? feels like someone is having fun at my expense, maybe..
Thumper: @Roflcakes: actually I was surprised the pics were still there, I quit subscribing to them years ago. (I got that account to sell stuff on ebay, you know, set up bigger pics of the stuff. Never got into it, though. Just a happy circumstance to get some use out of them yet. But yeah, their free accounts have a 10 gig limit that resets each month on the day you joined..
Anonymous26: Funny enough I am anon 11 again, been a while, but I can only take claim for writing anon 11 and 20, and that's it. I still would like to know why there are bananas there.
Anon28: If you had simply pointed out that spelt is a completely acceptable form in some varieties of English, I would have had no problem with your comment, but when you basically said that American English is improper English, you crossed the line. I haven't seen any comparisons of numbers of speakers of British and American English recently, but I bet they are both above 40% of the total and for those for whom English is a second language, American English may well be the primary form spoken, so don't ridicule a perfectly good form of English or I'll slap your fanny (There is nothing dirty about that in American English (though it does sound a bit childish) and if you insist on using the 'proper' British English meaning and don't have the right anatomical equipment, Ill be glad to cut you one.)!
SPLURT! SPLURT! SPLURT!
SPLOOOGE!
SEQUEL! SEQUEL! SEQUEL!
LOGIC ERROR.
In American English, spelt primarily refers to the hardy wheat grown mostly in Europe, and the verb spell makes spelled in the past tense and as a past participle. In all other main varieties of English, spelt and spelled both work as the past tense and past participle of spell, at least where spell means to form words letter by letter or (with out) to make clear. Outside the U.S., the two forms are interchangeable in these uses, and both are common.
To summarize, in all varieties of English spelt IS a word, and in proper (read not American unfortunately) English, it is the proper spelling of the past tense of spell.
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I guess there's always tinypic.
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Anon28: If you had simply pointed out that spelt is a completely acceptable form in some varieties of English, I would have had no problem with your comment, but when you basically said that American English is improper English, you crossed the line. I haven't seen any comparisons of numbers of speakers of British and American English recently, but I bet they are both above 40% of the total and for those for whom English is a second language, American English may well be the primary form spoken, so don't ridicule a perfectly good form of English or I'll slap your fanny (There is nothing dirty about that in American English (though it does sound a bit childish) and if you insist on using the 'proper' British English meaning and don't have the right anatomical equipment, Ill be glad to cut you one.)!