scanter
Attachment 184601
(Remember in the days of old... "chicks" use to wear these not only at the beach, but around the house!) :naughty: :alien:
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scanter
Attachment 184601
(Remember in the days of old... "chicks" use to wear these not only at the beach, but around the house!) :naughty: :alien:
^^You must have grown up in a much different house than me...
canter
can·ter
/ˈkan(t)ər/
Learn to pronounce
noun
noun: canter
a three-beat gait of a horse or other quadruped between a trot and a gallop.
"I rode away at a canter"
a ride on a horse at the gait of a canter.
plural noun: canters
"we came back from one of our canters"
verb
verb: canter; 3rd person present: canters; past tense: cantered; past participle: cantered; gerund or present participle: cantering
(of a horse) move at a canter in a particular direction.
"they cantered down into the village"
Center
Attachment 184612
(Yeah, the hand shows a decent center.) :alien:
renter
Attachment 184658
(Remember kids... money can't buy love, only rent it.) :alien:
rentor
Noun
(plural rentors)
(rare) A person who rents a property to a rentee
Attachment 184685
Rantor (n.) The person by whom a grant or conveyance is made.
Attachment 184690
(Rare)... Webster's American Dictionary Bible Word
cantor
can·tor
/ˈkan(t)ər,ˈkantôr/
noun
noun: cantor; plural noun: cantors
1. an official who sings liturgical music and leads prayer in a synagogue.
2. (in formal Christian worship) a person who sings solo verses or passages to which the choir or congregation responds.
captor
Attachment 184693
(She was then... but did turn a bit insane.) :alien: