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Wet Behind the Ears

Wet behind the ears.. odd expression to describe someone who is naive and inexperienced.

Please rate and comment over at YouTube to help the video.

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228 Comments and 32 threads

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  1. okay4now says: 84

    Hwk: Of course people have. It’s use to be an especially common phrase, often used like: ‘I’m not still wet behind the ears you know.’

  2. seankim says: 83

    hey, marina!!!

    you would be great at this game! go her and try the game called SUDS. you have to spell words before the timer goes out. knowing you, your words would be longer and more difficult than most. if you beat my score, you get a virtual high five from SeanHouTx.

    http://games.fandango.com/allgames.aspx

  3. matalexwolf says: 82

    Hey M, how have you been? life without internet connection has been reeeeeally strange! Missed you loads too. My days with out seeing HFWs has been horrid! Will be in class soon to catch up when back on line. Busy looking for new place to live. Looked at one really old farm house, owned by two spinster sisters fully loaded with Gin and Tonics at 11am!! OMG!!! After a cuppa tea, my senses were tingling that they may have been getting some designs on me!!!! OMG!!!! Their fat cat sat on a fake leopard skin rug, coughing fir balls all the time, every breath sounded like his last, poor thing!! looked around quickly and made a sharp exit with out looking back!!! Nightmare!

    You are looking better than ever; Mahoosive hug and endless kisses
    MXO)

  4. leonard says: 81

    [continental] like our teacher, MARINA– the queen of H0tF0rW0rds

  5. leonard says: 80

    I think Marina is baring the soul straight of bridging the continents…clothing the mind: from Greece :lol:

  6. Capman911 says: 79

    Today is Captain Jack’s birth day. So lets all wish him a happy and healthy birth day. :grin:

  7. geoffm says: 78

    Hi, Marina!

    Could you investigate the difference between the two words “your” and “you’re”?

    I was watching the sundae lesson when I saw the text “What’s YOU’RE favorite flavor of ice cream?” and it made me confused… Surely our teacher couldn’t make a mistake…? ;-)

    …not to mention that it should be “favourite” and “flavour” ;-)

  8. PageDoll says: 76

    I thought the Quote of the day needed a little musical accompaniment… so here it is. :twisted:

  9. Where does the phrase [salt of the earth] come from?

  10. mertevenk says: 74

    I’d really like to request the phrase [out of the blue]. Thank you in advance.

  11. wyo550 says: 73

    That insert at the end was Lesson #1? Wow! Lots’ of hard work since then, including your posting (below at 11am LA time, when it’s after dinner in Greece).

  12. telyn says: 71

    hey whats a pre modona?

  13. mister e says: 70

    What is a [bumpercrop]? Nice videos:)

  14. Capman911 says: 69

    Number 69 again. My lucky number. :twisted: :lol:

  15. e.kaye says: 68

    I saw your appearance on O’Reilly last night. It brought back memories, I once dated a beautiful Russian girl named Marina. You looked stunning.

    So here is a word for you. Perhaps the longest word ever used. 52 letters.

    [aequeosalinocalcalinoceraceoaluminosocupreovitriolic]

    I checked your list and you already had pnuemonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis.

  16. PageDoll says: 66

    I have grown accustom to the EDIT button and now its gone!!! Why?
    For the past two days there have been problems with me getting on the site and even refreshing. It just doesn’t load or reload and theres no rhyme or reason to it. I thought it could be my connection but when I try any other address on my favorites list it loads so fast if I blink my eyes I miss the transition. :???:

  17. bsomebody says: 65

    Yes, I have been called wet behind the ears quite a few times. Where is the picture of the Pagedolls at Comicon? I would love to see pics of any HFW regulars at the event… :smile:

    • PageDoll says: 65.1

      Page is the one in the big red chair and I’m in the jacket and white button down.

      I just heard this song and thought is was pretty catchy. What do you think?

      • Page is the one in the big red chair and I’m in the jacket and white button down.

        I just heard this song and thought is was pretty catchy. What do you think?

        •  
          Hey PD,
          I think you meant this song?

          You had inadvertently continued your sentence with the word “this” right after the video ID, which caused a malformed YT URL. Hope I got it right. Without the edit button I’ll have to double check.

          • Two times I tried!!
            Thats what I get for trying to go back and add a link to the middle of a sentence. :x

            Your fix works, Thank You! :grin:

            Cool song, right? :cool:

          • saw a preacher man in cuffs
            Taking money from the church,
            He stuffed his bank account with righteous dollar bills

            But even still I can’t say much
            ‘Cause I know we’re all the same
            Oh yes we all seek out to satisfy those thrills

            You know there aint no rest for the wicked
            Money dont grow on trees
            I got bills to pay
            I got mouths to feed
            There aint nothing in this world for free

            I know I can’t slow down
            I can’t hold back
            Though you know I wish I could

            is this, this?

            —so *Page*Doll*(PageDoll) are two people?

  18. mrbloke says: 64

    Hey Marina!

    I would like to know what is the origin of the use of the word [chestnut]. Not as in the nut you eat but as in “An old, frequently repeated joke, story, or song.”

    For example, people usually say “oh that old chestnut…”

    Thanks

  19. hoodster says: 63

    Hey! I just found out [set] has the most meanings in the English dictionary… Could you explain why this is? Thanks! -Hoodster

  20. what is “SLINGER” such as gunslinger..any help..

  21. iismathias3 says: 61

    I would like to request the word [booze]

  22. hi!
    I was wondering where the term ‘you cant swing a cat in here’ comes from? i know it means when a room or a place is very small!!
    Anyway, Good luck
    Love TJ :D

    • beevee14 says: 60.1

      Did you ever try to swing a cat in a small room? :???: Inevitably, you are going to hit something, and if the cat is to big, it could mess up all of the momentum you had built up. Then you have to start over. By then, the cat is more alert to what is going on, so you got that to deal with…. :shock: :oops: :twisted:

      Bee, you should be ashamed… :mrgreen: :cool:

  23. ryanmpls says: 59

    What does [Solera] mean and where does it come from? I guess it has roots in spanish for sol, and something that traces back to latin, but I’m really curious what it really means because it’s a popular brand name and some bar around town is going to call itself ’solera.’ I’d really like to know the story on this word :)

  24. wetsuit5 says: 58

    Word origin request: [gluttonous]
    Actually I’m looking for another word (can’t find it) meaning “Delight in Eating”, but without a negative connotation. Also a scientific name for a person who Delights in Eating (without the negative connotation). Like voracious delight in eating.

  25. Richard says: 57

    So, I’m new to this website, and I have to say Marina, where have you been all my life? Haha. Saw you on O’Reilly tonight and yeah. Too bad you’re taken and all that jazz or I’d have to marry you? :P Anyways, great job tonight!

  26. Evan Owen says: 56

    ***Farm sayings***

    OK, let’s start a thread of agricultural metaphors & figures of speech:

    “Make hay while the sun shines.”
    “Spring chicken”
    “‘Til the cows come home.” :grin:

    • leonard says: 56.1

      “eating wild oats” ‘hog tied by the marina” or “in the dog house because I came home when the rooster was crowing”

      :cool: I ain’t gonna work on Maggie’s farm no more. I ain’t gonna work on Maggie’s farm no more. Well, I wake up in the morning, Fold my hands and pray for rain. I got … …he hands you a nickel…[NIcKel]

      …evan will pull my mustard :lol:

    • Capman911 says: 56.2

      Early to bed, early to rise, makes a man healthy, wealthy and wise.
      Don’t count your chickens before they hatch.
      Can’t make a silver purse out of a sows ear.
      Which came first the chicken or the egg?
      Waste nothing on a hog but the squeal.
      Your fences need to be horse-high, pig-tight and bull-strong.
      Keep skunks and bankers and lawyers at a distance.
      Life is simpler when you plow around the stump.
      A bumble bee is considerably faster than a John Deere tractor.
      Words that soak into your ears are whispered…not yelled.
      Meanness doesn’t just happen overnight.
      Forgive your enemies. It messes up their heads.
      Do not corner something that you know is meaner than you.
      It don’t take a very big person to carry a grudge.
      You cannot unsay a cruel word.
      Every path has a few puddles.
      When you wallow with pigs, expect to get dirty.
      The best sermons are lived, not preached.
      Most of the stuff people worry about ain’t never gonna happen anyway.
      Don’t judge folks by their relatives.
      Remember that silence is sometimes the best answer.
      Live a good, honorable life. Then when you get older and think back, you’ll enjoy it a second time.
      Don’t interfere with something that ain’t bothering you.
      Timing has a lot to do with the outcome of a rain dance.
      If you find yourself in a hole, the first thing to do is stop digging.
      Sometimes you get, and sometimes you get got.
      The biggest troublemaker, you’ll probably ever have to deal with, watches you from the mirror every morning.
      Always drink upstream from the herd.
      Good judgment comes from experience, and a lot that comes from bad judgment.
      Letting the cat outta the bag is a whole lot easier than putting it back in.
      If you get to thinking you’re a person of some influence, try ordering somebody else’s dog around.
      Live simply. Love generously. Care deeply. Speak kindly.

      That’s all I can add for now. :smile:

    • beevee14 says: 56.3

      Setting fence posts by the light of the moon.
      He went to shit, and the hogs ate him.
      Make hay while the sun shines.
      You can’t spread manure without getting some on you.
      Cows are laying down so its probably gonna rain.
      Nothing runs like a Deere.
      And my favorite…
      Her ass is wider than 6-row plow! :mrgreen:

    • errol says: 56.4

      Don’t count your chickens before they are hatched.

    • errol says: 56.5

      Just because the cat had kittens in the oven doesn’t make them biscuits.

    • neuroway says: 56.6

      Agricultural metaphors, eh?

      Lemme tell ya somethin’ here. If ya can’t dazzle ‘em with brilliance, baffle ‘em with bull. – WC Fields (1880 – 1946)

  27. You were wonderful as always on The Factor, Dear Teach. I started to get mad when I saw the first glimpse of your book, but he did give you a decent plug at the end of the segment.
    You amaze me and inspire me.

    Always.

  28. peteyy says: 52

    MARINA!!!!! I would like to request the word [exorcism] I have no idea where it came from or if it has anything to do with exorcise! Thanks!

  29. Venomrock67 says: 51

    IRENA SENDLER

    Got info on this amazing and beautiful woman in my email, I just felt compelled to share this on HFW.

    This is truly amazing! It just shows what we humans regard as “humanity” – unfortunately some “high flyer” whose assistant probably did all the work – gets the kudos that our unsung heroes deserve!! What a disgusting system we live in and what a remarkable woman she was!!!

    The prize doesn’t always go to the most deserving!!!!!!!

    There recently was a death of a 98 year-old lady named Irena. During WWII, Irena, got permission to work in the WarsawGhetto, as a Plumbing/Sewer specialist. She had an ‘ ulterior motive ‘ … She KNEW what the Nazi’s plans were for the Jews, (being German.) Irena smuggled infants out in the bottom of the tool box she carried and she carried in the back of her truck a burlap sack, (for larger kids.) She also had a dog in the back that she trained to bark when the Nazi soldiers let her in and out of the ghetto. The soldiers of course wanted nothing to do with the dog and the barking covered the kids/infants noises. During her time of doing this, she managed to smuggle out and save 2500 kids/infants. She was caught, and the Nazi ‘ s broke both her legs, arms and beat her severely. Irena kept a record of the names of all the kids she smuggled out and kept them in a glass jar, buried under a tree in her back yard. After the war, she tried to locate any parents that may have survived it and reunited the family. Most of course had been gassed. Those kids she helped got placed into foster family homes or adopted.

    Last year Irena was up for the Nobel Peace Prize … She was not selected.

    * Al Gore won, for a slide show on Global Warming.

    LET’S SEND THIS ONE AROUND THE WORLD!!!!!!!!

    May she rest in Peace.

    • beevee14 says: 51.1

      Did you know that Al Gore’s net wealth has gone up 5000% since he got “Green”? 5000% :!: :shock:
      I wonder how much Ms. Sendler made taking them babies out… :?: :|

      Strange world. Of course, there could be some members of the Nobel Commitee who do NOT believe The Holocaust happened but are positive we are in a global meltdown!

      Thanks for keepin’ it real, V Rock. :idea:

    • Evan Owen says: 51.2

      A more complex hero was Oskar Schindler, who started out as an opportunistic Nazi and ended up a “righteous Gentile” for saving 1100 Jews during the Holocaust.

  30. distinctav says: 50

    Dear Teacher,

    I came up with a word about four years ago to describe the combination of Education and Entertainment. The word is [Edutainment].

    Clearly you have exceeded all my expectations when I started using the word ;-)

    I design advanced smart-home systems across the U.S. and we often tie together home offices, homework stations, and entertainment spaces.

    Can you tell me if Edutainment has become a mainstream word?

    Thanks for edutaining us!

    -distinctav

  31. jimj122345 says: 49

    That was a good one. Thanks Jimj122345

  32. Capman911 says: 48

    Look guys my wife just left for California to the LA area. She went to visit a friend that is stationed at Ft Erwin California. If you see her please keep her there for a while so I can get some PEACE AND QUIT for a while. The ladies can use her as they see fit. :twisted: :lol: :lol:

  33. Ivan says: 47

    Privet :) ! A ti mogjesh obyasnit slovo [propulsion] i skazat pochyemu imeno ‘puls’. Ogromoye spasibo iz Chicago ;) .

  34. Marinaaaaaaaaa!!! I would like to know the origin of the phrase [Drunk as a Skunk] As far as i know, skunks don’t drink alcohol! I would love to hear back!

    Thanks! :]

  35. hi marina,
    could you please explain the origin of the word: [boyle]
    thank you

  36. j4ymark says: 44

    Marina, please explain the phrase: [tapper slack]. Thank you.

  37. AlDizzl34 says: 43

    I think the word you should do the word [Filibuster]. It is a political term, but it is a pretty wacky sounding and I’d like to know how they came up with it.

  38. Gerald III says: 42

    I would also like to make a suggestion/request for the word [nomenclature].

  39. hotrocky says: 41

    Marina, I’m a candidate for Tulsa City Council, District Four. Would you like to endorse my candidacy? Here’s my website:
    http://www.rocky4tulsa.com

    I think it would look a lot better if I had an endorsement with a picture of you.

    -Rocky Frisco

  40. Berkaichu says: 40

    Homework: No one has called me wet behind the ears. But when I was a teenager, a person called me “newbie” when I bought my first game console. I was playing terrible! :roll:

    BTW, I wanna know the origin of the disease [chickenpox]. My cousin had it until last Wednesday. :|

    ~B

  41. PageDoll says: 39

    Hey guys, check out these great photos of Marina taken by photographer, Nina Berman.

  42. Che Volay says: 38

    Have heard that your ears are so dirty you have potatoes growing out of them.

  43. noirmyst says: 37

    I’d like to request what the origin of the phrase [mull over] or [mull it over] is! In the mean time i’ll just mull over the possible origins of this odd phrase. :smile:

  44. BillyB says: 36

    Farmers eh? Well Shepherds have more time on their hands so they do more with it than make up phrases & such… BaaaStuds

  45. rose_buds92 says: 35

    I would like to request the phrase [smart aleck] It’s been used in my house for as long as I can remember. We would say, “Stop being such a smart aleck!” and today I realized what a strange phrase that really is. Was Aleck a person and how did this phrase come to be? :)

  46. pandion says: 34

    There are a lot of farmers in my family so I have heard this expression before.
    :grin:

  47. labbatt78 says: 33

    Wet behind the ears? It’s more like a “Wet Willie” :lol:

  48. ewigkase1 says: 32

    I have enjoyed your for sometime. but it is time for me to finale take the time to make a word request and it is [canvas]. is there more to it then to just a [canvas] for painting on?

    danke

  49. seesixcm6 says: 31

    Dear Marina,
    You’re lovlier now than when you first started. The only way you could be “wet behind your ears” is if you put some nice perfume there! :razz:
    When I was young, I passed exams to earn FCC licenses and business certifications, so I behaved like an expert and I never was accused of being “wet behind the ears” at work. Lots of training and study helped make the job easier.
    Seesixcm6

  50. Gerald III says: 30

    I was called “wet behind the ears” whilst playing the EVE Online: Apocrypha demo. I had asked a question about the insurance feature in the game in the in-game help chat window because I had recently lost my ship and was only reimbursed for the purchase price of the ship. I was called “wet behind the ears” and other remarks were made regarding my inexperience with the game (all of which were made in jest).

    None of the equipment mounted on the ship was covered, and the mounted equipment was worth 4/5x what the purchase price of the ship was. So the insurance company screws you over in EVE Online too. I’m impressed.

  51. Homework:Yes they have, but I proved them wrong soon after (in most cases) :roll:

  52. “You’re wet behind the ears!”
    “Oh, yeah?!”
    “Yeah!”
    “Well, you’re an ear of corn!”
    “What’s that suppose to mean?”
    “That proves it!” – “You really are wet behind the ears!”

  53. See, you no nothing. You’re wet behind the ears. If I pull on your earlobes water pours out your ears and dribbles down the sides of your face.

  54. That was the same day she shaved her head and decided to get kinky.

  55. I told this kid at school I’d give him $5 if he could lick his elbow. It was fun watching him try. Geesh! So wet behind the ears!

  56. freebird says: 24

    :shock: WORD REQUEST:[ fogducker ] :shock:

  57. Just a greenhorn never wet…
    [fantasia]

  58. Zephyr says: 22

    Hiya Marina! I was wondering what the origin of the word [digital] was… I guess we live in the sort of age now where we should at least know where the word came from ;-)

    Domo Arigato Gozaimasu! :mrgreen:

    ~*Zephyr*~

  59. Hi!! I’d like to know where the phrase [Shaggy Dog Joke/Story] came from. Thanks!!! I love your shows!!!

  60. tonyb says: 20

    My former in-laws. When I married their daughter when I was in the Army at 18. we don’t know a thing, right. That is some really neat glossy white pearly lipstick you have on!!

  61. Whats the Origin of the phrase ["A month of Sundays"]

  62. dantebucci says: 18

    Please tell me the origin of the word [Robot]

  63. :| i have had sweat beads drip off my earlobes

  64. Comic con might be big but jobbie nooner is better you should check it out sum time marina Lake St Claire is hopping. maybe to cutting edge 4 you marina.

  65. bigbhd95 says: 15

    Dearest Marina, teacher is off to Greece :cool: when you get a chance :roll:
    find out what I mean when I tell you :shock: [SAGAPORE] hope its spelled
    correct :oops: B.B. :cool: P.S. have a wonderful time & a safe return love B.B.

  66. Venomrock67 says: 14

    Subject: Having [Guts] or [Balls] :mrgreen:

    Guts or balls. There is a medical distinction. We’ve all heard about people
    having guts or balls, but do you really know the difference between them?

    In an effort to keep you informed, the definitions are listed below:

    GUTS – Is arriving home late after a night out with the guys, being met by
    your wife with a broom, and having the guts to ask: ‘Are you still
    cleaning, or are you flying somewhere?’

    BALLS – Is coming home late after a night out with the guys, smelling of
    perfume and beer, lipstick on your collar, slapping your wife on the butt
    and having the balls to say: You’re next, Chubby.’

    I hope this clears up any confusion on the definitions.
    Medically speaking there is no difference in the outcome. Both result in
    death :grin:

    Homework:
    I’ve never been “wet behind the ears” till I came to this site :???:

  67. 2utoday says: 13

    :mrgreen: I’ve never been wet behind the ears unless you count that time back in 1962 when I went undercover behind the iron curtain. Oops! I can’t talk about it. Never mind!

  68. hs4mm says: 12

    Nina Berman’s photos of Marina Life with internet superstar Marina Orlova, of hotforwords.com.

    Recall that Marina said Nina visited her to take photos for a “cover”.

    First very interesting point: Nina took all those pictures just to get one picture to use for a cover!

    Second interesting point — this concerns the question “cover of what?”: The photos were taken on May 28, 09; and Marina’s book was printed by mid to late July. So if the cover Berman photographed for was the cover of the book, then it means that book Publisher delayed deciding on the cover photo till the last “minute” and then acted very quickly (in the span of a month or so)! Strange, since one would have thought that the cover photo would have been taken and chosen while the photos for the inside of the book were being taken and chosen. But all this is largely speculation, leaving one with the question: What precisely was the cover Berman shot for?

    One thing I noticed in the photos: Gorby has a good pose in those pictures by Berman in which he shows up. Did Berman pose Gorby, or did she take the shot with a view to capturing Gorby in a good pose?

    And here’s what’s really odd — I only notice Marina in the twitpics she posts; but in all of Berman’s photos that involve Gorby, I am unable to avoid noticing Gorby — it is as though Berman was more interested in photographing Gorby than Marina — this makes me dislike Berman.

    PS: Click to edit is permanently on!

  69. Sure have when i was younger my dad always use to tell me that on various occasions. He’s so smart! lmao! :lol:

  70. Dear Teacher,

    One thing that would be useful would be a specific lesson on the application of high resolution [spectroscopy] to the carbon isotopes.

    Best regards,

    David

    • I’m terribly sorry, but Marina missed a few payments on her spectrometer and it got repossessed, so your request probably won’t happen. However, she still has her A.C. Gilbert chemistry set, microscope and a well-aged bowl of spaghetti with all kinds of stuff growing in it (probably carbon-based) so maybe she can whip up something that will scratch your scientific itch.

      It’s true, I tell you.

  71. Dear Teacher,

    I would like to have the word spectroscopy defigned.

    We would be happy to help you with the research and give you a tour of our labs.

    http://www.jpl.nasa.gov

    Your faithful student.

    David

  72. muggins says: 8

    In the first half of the 20th Century America, there was a migration from the farm to the city. Young folk didn’t want to be grouped with slow talkin’ hayseeds and hicks. They wanted to be modern. Talk fast like they do in the city. There may have been some phrases, as well as music & miscellaneous know-how, lost in that social movement. Nothin’ peed my mom off as when I called her “ma”.

  73. pedanticKarl says: 7

     
    Excellent video lesson. I didn’t have a clue as to it’s origin, so that must mean I’m wet behind the ears. :lol: Have I ever been called that? No, but I’ve had [the lights on, and nobody was home] and sometimes I [fall off of the turnip truck] :grin:

    Loved all of the photos from Comic-Con

    Marina, I love your new YouTube channel design and the colors. Looks great!!!

  74. Hey Marina!

    I’ve been a big fan of yours on Youtube, but I JUST got an account here. So, I turned 21 in February, and you know…I’ve been doing “some” partying, haha. Mm, I’d like to request the word [alcohol]. If you could do a video of that, it would be amazing! Thanks!

  75. shazam says: 5

    id like to request the word [Buffet]

  76. James says: 4

    Good lesson Marina, You were very sweet when you started, you still are now…. You said you get 5c a comment,I wonder if all the youtube h8rz would act differently if they knew!

  77. leonard says: 2

    Nice and funny!! :grin: Peace to the “greenhorns”…Wet behind da ears
    :P

  78. leonard says:

    Whats with these messages “Tramadol 180 electronic check.”…in the comments column? :?: :???:

  79. oh yeah. that sweet romanian girl. she’s quite a handful.

  80. hs4mm says:

    Thank you for telling. She argues intelligibly. She’s married; I wonder what her husband is like {editing over an hour after initial post: as a person and as a man; so: I wonder what kind of a person and what kind of a man she picked for a husband}.

  81. leonard says:

    money nations are indigenous of the indigent…let-us :cool: @greatestpotential

    Spank the dam BANK, Hank: or, I will yank the stinky stank, right frank and blank crAnk.

    my ears got boxed and a vegtable was formed…:-)…who do I pay?…I owe the ” black hole”

  82. Evan Owen says:

    Who? a href=”http://tednielsen.smugmug.com/photos/23835369_NcVsH-O.jpg”>Paula Mitrache? :grin: Your comment & a bunch others seem to be misplaced on page 1, like they’re replies separated from the original comment. :???:

  83. even sideshow carnys make a little on the side. plenty for everyone. if the tyrants don’t take the food from the baby’s mouth then they’re at the throat to take grab of the baby’s arm before the spoon can provide the blessing of nourishment. and for what, it’s not a question, it’s a sneer of disgust.

  84. I’ve heard he’s hard of hearing.

  85. leonard says:

    What is what? :lol: :razz: :lol:

    Is was hear, loud and queer!

    [qUEEr]

  86. leonard says:

    “A pair of snakes rapped around the beating sticks and wings to fly” :lol: I say you digest well***][***well digests you I say :lol:

    “A pair of snakes rapped around the beating sticks and wings to fly”

    sets of BaByS numBered by colored coded suckers bees have wings staffed above the garden cries :cry:

  87. Evan Owen says:

    Edit function just went blooie.

    Paula Mitrache

Author: HotForWords

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