ahaliya bai gholkar
Of course not you muppet, temple run is amazing.
No. Very happily married to a woman.
you are gay
The modern gay rights movement is usually said to have originated in Germany in the 19th century.
gay
Stagestruck Gay Theatre in the 20th Century - 2000 was released on: USA: 24 June 2000 (San Francisco International Lesbian and Gay Film Festival)
Ha! That would be the surprise of the century.
It was as early as the late 19th century when they were first called as gay as their trait of being carefree, happy, bright and showy as a person.
In English, there was no term for a gay person in the 17th century, unless you consider that those caught were charged with the crime of buggery (so they may have been called buggers).
The gay Henri that everyone is talking about is Henri III, a historical figure who was openly gay and ruled as King of France in the late 16th century.
The word "gay" has evolved over centuries. In the 12th century, it originally meant "happy" or "lively." By the late 19th century, it was being used as a euphemism for homosexuality. Its current usage as a term for LGBTQ+ individuals started to gain prominence in the mid-20th century.
The word gay came to English from Norman French in the 12th century and meant joyful, carefree, bright and showy. By the 17th century the carefree aspect was emphasized and the word came to imply uninhibited by moral constraints and often had a sexual connotation. A gay man was a womanizer, a gay woman a whore, and a gay house a brothel. Still, it primarily meant uninhibited. The term Gay 90's (1890's) has nothing (much) to do with homosexuality. By the beginning of the 20th century the word begun to be used in reference of homosexuals, although as late as the 1950's an unmarried middle aged straight man might still be referred to as a gay bachelor, meaning he was free to live an uninhibited life style. By the end of the 20th century the term gay was used almost exclusively to refer to people attracted to others from the same sex.