Fanny means the ass in general, but no one says "fanny". We actually think that British people say "fanny" meaning ass, so we only say it that way to pretend to be British.
Adam (Open Your Eyes), Amy (Mr. Penguin), and Sasha (Young,Dumb,And Full Of Cum...) are my noobs.
Claudia is my grand-noob.
Lisette (bunny) is my great-grand noob.
^You just learned this recently. They call it stoop in other places too.
Adam (Open Your Eyes), Amy (Mr. Penguin), and Sasha (Young,Dumb,And Full Of Cum...) are my noobs.
Claudia is my grand-noob.
Lisette (bunny) is my great-grand noob.
in US its chips, in UK its crisps
in UK its chips, in US its fries
lol, when i went to the US i asked for sausage and chips at some free food place at our holiday park and so did my friend, we get our meals and have a plate of 2 sausages and a load of crisps.
YES POUTINE ROCKS!! And of course I live in the province in which it is considered a cultural meal. >_< I remember once an American came to Knowlton (my hometown) and went to Valentines where my sister worked and ordered a poutine and then bitched at her when he got it because supposedly he didn't get what he ordered. Turns out that he thought that poutine was steak. It was hilarious.
"We call him Cone because he tastes good when you lick him"
dm_rick wrote:hahah crazy americans, i was actually in montreal a couple years back but i never got to try some real poutine. i wonder if its any different...
Depends on where you buy your poutine and what is put in it.
"We call him Cone because he tastes good when you lick him"
just gravy and cheese curds. and obviously fries, i didnt know there was much else to put in it, but here you can only get it at a few mcdonalds, restaurants and fry truck places.