"Sexy Origins and Intimate Things" by Charles Panati I thought provided some informative things.
Mr. and Mrs. Cuntless
Today, any family with the surname Cuntless would wisely change it, or risk subjecting their children to years of serious verbal abuse. But in thirteenth century England, Cuntless (and Cuntles) was a proper last name, as was Clawecunte (claw cunt), Wydecunte (wide cunt), and Gropecunte (grope cunt). Today, "wide cunt" and "grope cunt" sound particularly offensive.
In medieval London, Gropecunte Lane was a red-light district in Oxford, which was later changed to Magpie Lane--a marginal improvement from a feminist viewpoint. It should be obvious by this point that "cunt" was not always a dirty word.
As an Anglo-Saxon surname, Cunte was first recorded in 1066, the year the Normans invaded England. The word then seems to have become either an acceptable, inoffensive prefix or suffix of other surnames: Cunteshaw, Bellecunthe. So common was the word that every town had its share of "cunts."
Chaucer uses the worrd several times, spelling it queynte, in The Canterbury Tales. He believed that "cunt" derived from "quaint," which meant a many-layered, in-folded mystery.
An Italian medical text of the thirteenth century, Lanfrank's Science of Cirurgie [Surgery], renders the word in a valid anatomical usage. "In wymmen, the neck of the bladdre is short, and made fast to the cunte." It is easy to see how the fleshy folds of the vulva could be described as a "many-layered, in-folded mystery."
Invite a friend... "Would you like to be a part of this romance MFF?"
http://www.bash.org/?626249
<Handy> There are 2 kinds of people in the world.
<Handy> 1. Those who need closure.
<Marko> And?
<DavyP> AND?
"Meso"?
Exellent a type of soup, what was you wager?
"horny"
If they want answers, they should have to pay for them: http://answers.google.com/answers/
I didn't think you could fit chairs into a rifle.
"Sexy Origins and Intimate Things" by Charles Panati I thought provided some informative things.
Mr. and Mrs. Cuntless
Today, any family with the surname Cuntless would wisely change it, or risk subjecting their children to years of serious verbal abuse. But in thirteenth century England, Cuntless (and Cuntles) was a proper last name, as was Clawecunte (claw cunt), Wydecunte (wide cunt), and Gropecunte (grope cunt). Today, "wide cunt" and "grope cunt" sound particularly offensive.
In medieval London, Gropecunte Lane was a red-light district in Oxford, which was later changed to Magpie Lane--a marginal improvement from a feminist viewpoint. It should be obvious by this point that "cunt" was not always a dirty word.
As an Anglo-Saxon surname, Cunte was first recorded in 1066, the year the Normans invaded England. The word then seems to have become either an acceptable, inoffensive prefix or suffix of other surnames: Cunteshaw, Bellecunthe. So common was the word that every town had its share of "cunts."
Chaucer uses the worrd several times, spelling it queynte, in The Canterbury Tales. He believed that "cunt" derived from "quaint," which meant a many-layered, in-folded mystery.
An Italian medical text of the thirteenth century, Lanfrank's Science of Cirurgie [Surgery], renders the word in a valid anatomical usage. "In wymmen, the neck of the bladdre is short, and made fast to the cunte." It is easy to see how the fleshy folds of the vulva could be described as a "many-layered, in-folded mystery."
I was hoping for "Extreme Animal Crossing" http://games.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=167989&c id=14008510