^^' What exactly means being "properly" hard? Is there a way of being non properly hard? What a weird choice of words he has on his mind! Moonacre
I think it means like, really hard, there’s a thing thats called half hard which you can take care of by calming down rather than touching it but if it’s properly hard then he’d have to cum to calm down.
I think it means like, really hard, there’s a thing thats called half hard which you can take care of by calming down rather than touching it but if it’s properly hard then he’d have to cum to calm down. Cherry-Pop3
I think it means like, really hard, there’s a thing thats called half hard which you can take care of by calming down rather than touching it but if it’s properly hard then he’d have to cum to calm down. Cherry-Pop3
Exactly! It ain’t no chub. This usage for the word comes off very British to me. In America we only use the word proper in very specific ways ‘Proper attire’, ‘proper grammar’, ‘proper pronunciation’ , or when someone is telling someone else to do something ‘properly’
„Probably“ ?
,,Properly'"
Oh, i didn’t read it properly (⁄ ⁄·⁄ω⁄·⁄ ⁄)
^^' What exactly means being "properly" hard? Is there a way of being non properly hard? What a weird choice of words he has on his mind!
It's ok, I had to read it like 3 times before cause I thought he said ,,probably", too
I think it means like, really hard, there’s a thing thats called half hard which you can take care of by calming down rather than touching it but if it’s properly hard then he’d have to cum to calm down.
Yeah. He could be half hard, when a guy is properly hard it's like when we say it's rock hard, you know?
I see... Then I guess he'll need help to take care of his problem (properly) *wink, wink*
Damn you know your way around *clapping*
Exactly!
It ain’t no chub.
This usage for the word comes off very British to me.
In America we only use the word proper in very specific ways
‘Proper attire’, ‘proper grammar’, ‘proper pronunciation’ , or when someone is telling someone else to do something ‘properly’