Wonder if they'd be as popular if they'd been christened differently?
From the Wilfully Misinterpreted Acronyms challenge. See all 128 entries (closed)
( , Fri 2 Dec 2011, 12:16, archived)
From the Wilfully Misinterpreted Acronyms challenge. See all 128 entries (closed)
( , Fri 2 Dec 2011, 12:16, archived)
Ah, TNUC is a popular word that me and my mate use
It has the meaning, and impact of CUNT, but you can safely use it in public, online and in front of parents.
( ,
Fri 2 Dec 2011, 12:25,
archived)
I expect it can be pronounced the same as the cake
"You Tunnock cake!" "What a complete Tunnock!"
( ,
Fri 2 Dec 2011, 12:28,
archived)
I think I could get away
with "cunt" in front of my parents. They were listening to a documentary about swear words once and when the narrator said "the c word", they thought he meant "Christ".
( ,
Fri 2 Dec 2011, 12:28,
archived)
The word 'berk' is a fairly safe way to call someone a cunt
As it's short for 'Berkeley Hunt', Cockney rhyming slang for cunt.
( ,
Fri 2 Dec 2011, 12:30,
archived)
Haha
and do you think Google Maps are trying to suggest something:
( ,
Fri 2 Dec 2011, 12:43,
archived)
Surely Cuba would be a more obvious suggestion
I'm not even being political here
( ,
Fri 2 Dec 2011, 12:48,
archived)
did you draw pubes on the leg,
to make it look like a....
...leg with pubes on it?
( ,
Fri 2 Dec 2011, 13:35,
archived)
...leg with pubes on it?
Guilty as charged
what I was aiming for was a screaming lion with a broken cock.
( ,
Fri 2 Dec 2011, 13:46,
archived)