Better to have loved a short man than never to have loved a tall.
Bet
Wow
he was married to a women named Beth! but they are no longer married, now he is dating a women named Amy, this is the word on the street or should i say in the barn!
Plantar aspect The medical term for under the foot is the plantar aspect. It is the padded area on the bottom of the foot, just before the toes. The bottom of the foot is also known as the sole. The front part of the plantar aspect, where the metatarsal bones are located, is sometimes called the ball of the foot. The medical term for the top of the foot is the dorsum or dorsal region
Where I come from (Liverpool), it's used without any hint of sarcasm etcetera, so I'm not convinced by the previous answer. Let me elaborate. If a child were to say, stub their toe and cry, their mother might say "awww it'll be a pig's foot in the morning love". More a phrase of comfort or of sympathy upon minor injury. At least around these parts.
no even a bigger croc cannot even destroy an elephant but a gustave i gonna say yes because he killed over 300 people in year .....
If you where to be 5 foot high a good horse would be about 15HH(Hands high) to 16HH.
at least he's the right height
"Better to have loved a short man than never to have loved a tall."
"Better to have loved a short man than never to have loved a tall."
Better to have loved a short man than never to have loved a tall
On foot :)
say foot in Urdu Paun
It depends. If you are married you say, yes. If you aren't married you say, no. ----
When you want to say she is married, with "two children" for example. Never to say who she is married to.
U have to put the pigmy in both of the fountains for the first two. For the last 38, you have to smack your buttcheaks and say, "hoopla momma!" repeditaly.
For 'foot' we say 'charan, pair' or 'paon' in Hindi.
how you can brake your foot in school on purpose is you can say that a basketball hit them in the foot or at ressus you can say you fell
Clutharachán or Lucharachán = elf, leprechaun, pigmy Sióg = fairy síogaí = elf, fairy, gossip, know-all, weakling Síofra = changeling, precocious child, sprite