you know those feisty little fucks who get on forums, and of their first three posts 2 are insults to you? i know too many of them, and begin to wonder if maybe this is one and the same person.
naaah i won't. just take a look at the spain forum but this might be just someone and not the person who is bothering me constantly. cuz thats always a supposed to be religious type of person who likes to speak in the name of every god possible and makes every god possible say that i can't go to any of these gods promised lands. next thing you know he's satan and i can't go to hell either it must be an exboy/girlfriend haha you know whats kinda weird, i read this topic (yeah i know i made it myself) and i though it said: you know those little fist fuckers who...
well hey, if i know for sure this is one person, i'll tell. theres ofcourse the uber feisty little fuck on hipgalleries trauma/sanjay theres the feisty little fuck xxsuziexx87 or something in the line of that not really bad though that suzie person, just...feisty accusing me, trying to get me starting a fight i guess. blehhh. i'm just tired of that shit. and theres your occasional: 'i know you like old guys, can i show you my dick' kind of fucks.
I really don't know why someone should bother you. I haven't been on here long, I know, but you don't seem to be a troublemaker.
i'm only here to object to your usage of the word "fiesty." fiesty is a pistol (in the "she's a firecracker of a girl" sorta way), not a peckerhead. you can ony use "fiesty" if they're funny and ultimately harmless. (i get called fiesty a lot, if you can't tell )
Eh, just try and ignore it. They're not worth your aggravation. Some people just thrive on conflict, steer clear of them. {{{Hugs}}}
Feisty This is an Americanism which is gaining ground in British and Australian English. It is defined in many dictionaries as 'aggressive, excitable, nervous, touchy' but is now more often used to mean 'spirited', 'assertive', 'able to speak up for oneself' (usually applied to women). It has also appeared in an advertisement for a high-performance car, presumably suggesting that the car is fast, tough, and exciting to drive. Words tend to change their meanings with time, sometimes through an error which gradually becomes accepted (as with decimate), often by being applied to different things, as in this case. Feisty is changing too quickly for dictionaries to keep up with Ð and it remains to be seen what the accepted meaning will eventually be. we are both right and when you use it here (in holland) they think you're talking about; 'aggressive, excitable, nervous, touchy' that one