If only she trimmed her Oddish...
Pokemon innuendo thread.
Originally Posted by ClutchMystaFlex![]()
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Ok, my participation in this thread is over![]()
Well, my Trials Evolution flag was something I won randomly that was given out to me what considers as a swag, did I got it right?Originally Posted by apdenton1
Oops, I never realized that!Originally Posted by apdenton1I think I have worked & hopped my tracks for a long time!
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Trials swag is different from real swag. Trials swag is more of a joke (i think...) but real swag is some teenagers (13 to 18) who dress with some snapbacks and other ugly things like some " i like boobies" bracelets, just to be cool. Where i live, there is this one guy who puts a McDonald's hat. That is considered as swag. The more your clothes is flashy and ugly you're swag. But it also goes with their stupid attitude.
I loathe trends. I even avoid youtube's trending section.![]()
Free shirts, posters, etc. are awesome though![]()
Kids be dumb.....Originally Posted by HpvenomZ
Definition of swag in English
swag
Pronunciation: /swag/
noun
1a curtain or piece of fabric fastened so as to hang in a drooping curve.
a decorative garland or chain of flowers, foliage, or fruit fastened so as to hang in a drooping curve:swags of holly and mistletoe
a carved or painted representation of a swag of flowers, foliage, or fruit.
2 [mass noun] informal money or goods taken by a thief or burglar:garden machinery is the most popular swag
products given away free, typically for promotional purposes:check out the fun bag of swag we gave our guests!
chiefly US cannabis, typically of a low grade: prices range from $40 a 10-seed packet for some Jamaican swag to $345 per pack for something tastier
3Australian/NZ a traveller’s or miner’s bundle of personal belongings.
informal a large number or amount:Howard has promised me a swag of goodies
verb (swags, swagging, swagged)
[with object]
1arrange in or decorate with a swag or swags of fabric:swag the fabric gracefully over the curtain tie-backs (as adjective swagged)the swagged contours of nomads' tents
2 [no object] Australian/NZ travel with one’s personal belongings in a bundle:we were swagging it in Queensland swagging my way up to the Northern Territory
3 [no object] chiefly literary hang heavily:the crinkly old hide swags here and there
sway from side to side:the stout chief sat swagging from one side to the other of the carriage
Origin:
Middle English (in the sense 'bulging bag'): probably of Scandinavian origin. The original sense of the verb (early 16th century) was 'cause to sway or sag'
Last third of that definition just made me think of knackersacks.