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August 13, 2003, 21:29
Kalleh
Lint
Lint between the toes is called gronk. Is there a similar word for lint in the navel?
August 13, 2003, 22:37
jerry thomas
Our basically thorough research department finds no toejam in the
gronk slot. Is there an urgent need for a synonym for belly-button fuzz?
August 14, 2003, 15:37
Hic et ubique
I can't answer your question, but we have talked about belly buttons before, and I also found this for you.

omphalologist [link]: a physician whose specialty need not be identified (facetious; akin to calling an unknown product a "widget".) His specialty is omphalology.

You will be pleased to know that for 2002 the Ig-Noble Prize, given annually for scientific research that "cannot or should not be reproduced," was awarded for a survey on belly button lint. 4799 persons responded to that survey.
August 14, 2003, 17:38
Kalleh
Well, I do thank you, Jerry and Hic, for humoring me and posting something here. It was late last night, and I was wanting to make a word post. However, I now realize this word post may get the prize for the worst post on the board! So sorry!

Anyway, to answer Jerry: Jerry, "gronk" is defined in my "There's a Word for It!" (~ Elster). While any author, online or published, can be wrong, I have been impressed by his work. The major sources he has relied upon are: Century Dictionary (1914); the second edition of the Oxford English Dictionary (1991); Webster's New International Dictionary, second edition (1934); Random House Dictionary of English Language, second edition, unabridged (1987); and the American Heritage Dictionary of the American Language, third edition (1992). The definition given in the book is: "a dialectal term for the dirt and scuzz that collects between your toes, colloquially known as cheese or toe-jam." However, I looked all through Google for that definition of "gronk" and didn't find it. So, it may not be accurate.

Now, I know that I have heard of that word for navel lint before, but I cannot remember it. However, I also realize that this isn't an important question!
August 23, 2003, 14:34
C J Strolin
As questions go, no, this isn't one of the more important but that doesn't mean it should go unanswered.

Navel lint? Sorry, no clue. But I do recall some celebrity from the 60's or late 50's (Orson Bean, maybe?) mentioning in an interview that there once was a Broadway showtune devoted to "nurr" (spelling totally uncertain but that's how it was pronounced) which this person explained was the technical term for lint that forms at the bottom of one's jacket pocket.

I had thought it might have come from "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying" but a google search there (not to mention the rest of the net using a variety of spellings) turned up nothing. The song wasn't exactly a major hit...
August 23, 2003, 19:48
Kalleh
The worst of it is, I know I've seen that word before. I just can't remember where.

I tried to search for "nurr", as I thought I might get a hint for navel lint. However, I couldn't find it, either. Interestingly, the words "ner" and "nur" exist, but they don't mean lint at the bottom of a pocket. Now, that would be a useful term; I always remove the "nurr" before I do the wash.
August 23, 2003, 22:08
WinterBranch
First of all, thanks to everyone for your kind welcomes! And please bear with me while I figure out how to post correctly. Smile

I did a little searching on navel lint and found this person's website. Ummm, it
really isn't for the faint of heart. Just a little warning.

He called it "fluff", by the way.

I also found this, which includes some different names for the belly button and some very interesting belly button related information.

[This message was edited by WinterBranch on Sat Aug 23rd, 2003 at 22:17.]
August 24, 2003, 11:02
tsuwm
quote:
Originally posted by Kalleh:

"gronk" is defined in my "There's a Word for It!" (~ Elster). While any author, online or published, can be wrong, I have been impressed by his work.


Charles tells me that there are two(2) errors in his book TaWfI (and leaves finding them as an exercise for the student). Perhaps this is one of them. Smile

seriously though, if I wanted to verify this word, I'd look in the DARE. (next on my wish-list of resources!)

http://polyglot.lss.wisc.edu/dare/dare.html

[This message was edited by tsuwm on Sun Aug 24th, 2003 at 11:11.]
August 24, 2003, 12:21
Hic et ubique
Oddly, such famous masterpieces as Michelangelo's Adam and Botticelli's Venus are anatomically incorrect, in that they depict their subjects as having a navel.
August 24, 2003, 14:10
tinman
quote:
Originally posted by WinterBranch:
I also found this which includes some different names for the belly button and some very interesting belly button related information.


This site contained a quote from The Troublesome Offspring of Cardinal Guzman:

"Don Emmanuel grinned, scratched his rufous beard and then his pubic region, and said, 'I will give you all the advice in the world if only you can tell me why it is that the dingleberries excavated from my navel by Felicidad are always composed of blue Lint, when I possess no clothes of that colour.' "

I've never before heard bellybutton lint called "dingleberries". Rather, I learned that dingleberries came from a different orifice!

The site also talks about bellybuttons and referred sensations (near the bottom of the page). Apparently some people feel a remote sensation when they touch their bellybuttons. How about you?

Tinman
August 25, 2003, 11:37
Kalleh
Thanks, Tsuwm, for that resource. I plan to buy it. Big Grin

quote:
How about you?
Oh, the questions that come up here! Wink

Tinman, is that resource posted on our Links for Linguaphiles? If not, should it be? It looked good to me.
August 26, 2003, 17:00
C J Strolin
Ref that site, there is a major (to a nit-picker like me) error. All mammals do not have navels. I assume you can name the two that don't. (answer, if not tomorrow, soon)

Also, when I was young and still in the self-exploration stage, I discovered that if I poked myself too deeply in my navel, not only would it hurt but I would immediately feel deeply depressed. I can still recreate this sensation today but, not being of a psychologically masochistic frame of mind, rarely do.
August 26, 2003, 19:51
shufitz
quote:
Originally posted by tinman:
I've never before heard bellybutton lint called "dingleberries". Rather, I learned that dingleberries came from a different orifice!
I'm pretty sure that Novobatzky and Shea have another word for this, Tinman, but I can't locate it at the moment. Frown
August 26, 2003, 23:22
tinman
quote:
Originally posted by C J Strolin:
All mammals do not have navels.

As a fellow nitpicker, I must tell you that the above statement is not true. Some mammals do have navels. Now, if you had said, "Some mammals do not have navels" or "Not all mammals have navels", then I could agree with you.

I didn't know the answer, but I looked it up.

Tinman
August 27, 2003, 09:18
<Asa Lovejoy>
mammals do not have
navels.
--------------------------------------------
I can't remember the critters' names, but for some strange reason the term, monotreme pops into my addled pate.

Now, as for dingleberries in the beard, perhaps said person is a point-of-origin coprophage. YUCCCHHHH! Eek
August 28, 2003, 12:30
C J Strolin
quote:
Originally posted by tinman:
As a fellow nitpicker, I must tell you that the above statement is not true. Some mammals do have navels. Now, if you had said, "Some mammals do not have navels" or "Not all mammals have navels", then I could agree with you.

Yes, yes, totally correct. And of course I can't cover myself with some sort of "Well, you knew what I meant" defense since, to do so, would simply add support to those greengrocers who insist on selling "apple's."

The two navel-less mammals are the duck-billed platypus and the somewhat related echidna, both of which are hatched from eggs. The fact that they are classified as mammals ranks right up there with "fire" being a one-syllable word -- I don't understand it but, thank you anyway, I'll accept both to be true without the benefit of the lengthly explanations that I'm sure many of you would be all too happy to inflict on me.


Semi-related sidenote: An old joke, supposedly born of an actual classroom situation, revolves around a teacher asking a student for the precise definition of the word "mammal." The student (not the brightest penny in the pile) replied "It has hair... And it gives milk..." before faltering which prompted the teacher to reply "Well, so far you haven't eliminated the coconut!"
August 29, 2003, 02:01
tinman
Since you didn't ask...

There are three types of mammals

• Placental mammals nourish fetus inside the body, attached by an umbilical cord to a placenta (hence the navel)

• Marsupials, like koalas and kangaroos, nourish young in an external pouch

• Monotremes, like the echidna and platypus, still lay eggs, like their reptilian ancestors

You didn't really think I'd not respond, did you, C J?

Tinman

[This message was edited by tinman on Fri Aug 29th, 2003 at 3:04.]
August 29, 2003, 14:18
C J Strolin
quote:
Originally posted by tinman:
You didn't really think I'd not respond, did you, C J?

Well, frankly, no, but I commend you on your brevity.

In yet another example of wanderingthreaditis, we've started out with words describing lint and now find ourselves deeply into zoology (pronounced zoe- [not zoo-] OL-o-gee, by the way) but such is life.

Confirmation please - Kangaroos etc, even though they are fed within the mother's pouch after their birth, are of course fed by the mother internally before that time. This would imply that they too have navels, yes? Tinman's referenced site implies that this is not the case.

I've never had the opportunity to closely examine Australian marsupials myself (that, along with making love with Britney Spears, are my two great unfulfilled fantasies) so any clarification from fellow Wordcrafters would be appreciated if only to satisfy my never-ending quest for generally useless knowledge. So, has anyone been in close contact with a kangaroo or koala? Or, for that matter, has anyone here made love with Britney?

Details in either case would be gratefully appreciated.
August 29, 2003, 23:06
arnie
I can confirm that Britney Spears does have a navel. http://www.britneyspears.com/photos/sass.php?img=02

Big Grin
August 30, 2003, 13:14
Kalleh
quote:
Confirmation please - Kangaroos etc, even though they are fed within the mother's pouch after their birth, are of course fed by the mother internally before that time. This would imply that they too have navels, yes?
Well, I haven't been close to a marsupial, either, to look for a navel (nor to Brittany; much thanks to Arnie for the confirmation! Wink).

However, this Web Site indicates that they may have a navel. While their gestation time is very short, the mother has a "yolk-type placenta". I guess it all depends on what that means.
August 30, 2003, 23:40
tinman
quote:
Originally posted by C J Strolin:
quote:
Originally posted by tinman:
You didn't really think I'd not respond, did you, C J?

Well, frankly, no, but I commend you on your brevity.

No, you didn't think I'd not respond?

quote:
... zoology (pronounced zoe- [not zoo-] OL-o-gee, by the way) ...

Quite right. There is a book called There is No Zoo in Zoology by Charles H. Elster (Collier Books, 1988)

quote:
This would imply that they too have navels, yes?

No. The placenta in placental mammals (true mammals or eutherians) supplies nourishment to the embryo during the long gestation period. The embryo is connected to the placenta by an umbilical cord. When this cord is severed in the newborn baby, the resulting scar is called the umbilicus, navel, or belly button. Wikipedia explains it better.

Marsupials have a short gestation period, and the embryo receives its nourishment from a yolk sac placenta. Apparently this yolk sac placenta is attached to the mother but not to the embryo, and the nourishment is absorbed (through diffusion?) directly rather than through an umbilical cord. Since the marsupial has no umbilical cord it can’t have a belly button. See marsupial in Wikipedia.

I found this on the exZOOberance site:

"REPRODUCTION
"Like all marsupials, kangaroos lack a true placenta, the structure in a pregnant female's womb that provides nutrients for and removes waste from the growing embryo. Instead of a fully developed placenta, kangaroo females form a type of yolk sac in the womb. The embryo absorbs nutrients from this yolk sac for four to five weeks and then emerges from the birth canal, still in an embryo-like form but with well-developed forelimbs."


I thought you might be interested in this little tidbit I found:

“These early explorers and naturalists were even more at a loss regarding the opossum's reproductive nature. The penis of the male opossum is bifurcated or forked. This, combined with the female opossum's prenatal habit of licking her belly, nipples and pouch area, led to the folktale that in reproducing, the male and female have sex through the female's nose and she then blows the young into her pouch. Later, it was discovered that the females have a bifurcated reproductive track and all the preening is done to create a moist warm pathway for the newborns to follow.”

Puts a new meaning in “blow job”, doesn’t it?

Tinman

[This message was edited by tinman on Sat Aug 30th, 2003 at 23:49.]
August 31, 2003, 02:18
Richard English
I learnt yesterday from an article in the "Radio Times" (arguably on of the UK's best written magazines and the one with fewest typographical and grammatical errors) that oral sex is illegal in many US States.

This was in a commentary about a programme covering the activities of a British laywer who specialises in trying to gain revokation of the death penalty imposed on many US offenders, who, as we know, often languish on Death Row for many years.

He deals only in this area - with two exceptions:

Firstly he is acting for the British suspects currently incarcerated in Guantanimo Bay by the US military and secondly he defends those accused of having oral sex in those US States that prohibit it!

I have to say that I was quite amazed to learn that such a common and accepted practice could be considered a crime - but then, who am I to try to fathom the minds of legislators?

Richard English
August 31, 2003, 11:58
Kalleh
quote:
oral sex is illegal in many US States.
I recently found that out myself, as well. Like you, I was stunned. It seems as though I may have posted about it somewhere here, but I can't find it now.

This thread has definitely taken a twist! Tinman, thanks for the elucidation about "yolk-type placentas." I hadn't heard of them before.

I continue to look through my word books to find that word, which I know exists, for navel lint. In the process, I have found some great words though! In the "Bodily Processes and Characteristics" chapter of the written "Grandiloquent Dictionary" I like hobbledehoy or an adolescent boy who is awkward or clumsy; a stipling. Then in "Depraved and Insulting English" there is cacocallia which means a state of being ugly but sexy. My best bet is probably Elster's "There's a Word for It!", but I've not found it yet....
August 31, 2003, 16:08
Hic et ubique
quote:
Originally posted by Richard English:
who am I to try to fathom the minds of legislators?
Should that be in our oxymoron thread?
September 01, 2003, 00:00
tinman
quote:
Originally posted by Kalleh:
quote:
oral sex is illegal in many US States.
It seems as though I may have posted about it somewhere here, but I can't find it now.

You did post on July 5 about a Texas law outlawing ownership of six dildos. I guess five is ok.
quote:
... "yolk-type placentas." I hadn't heard of them before.

Well, maybe if you had been a veterinary nurse... (Is there such a thing?) I hadn't heard of them before, either.

Tinman
September 01, 2003, 16:40
haberdasher
Try this link Smile

(That should be the strip for Monday September 1, 2003)
September 01, 2003, 18:58
Kalleh
Hilarious, Hab! Big Grin Now, if only we had the word for it....

Tinman, no, they don't have veterinary nurses; just veterinary technicians. And, God help anyone who would call a nurse a technician!

[This message was edited by Kalleh on Tue Sep 2nd, 2003 at 9:23.]
September 02, 2003, 09:10
tsuwm
quote:
Originally posted by Kalleh:
Now, if only we had the word for it....



okay, how about plaint? I guess not; that would be overloading, grumbled Tom.
September 02, 2003, 18:59
maxqnz
quote:
Originally posted by Kalleh:
Hilarious, Hab! Big Grin Now, if only we had the word for it....

Tinman, no, they don't have veterinary nurses; just veterinary _technicians_. And, God help anyone who would call a nurse a _technician_!

[This message was edited by Kalleh on Tue Sep 2nd, 2003 at 9:23.]


Here in Aotearoa, they are most definitely called veterinary nurses - I have interviewed several of them in my work, and I have never yet had one describe herself (so far I have only encountered females in this occupation) as a veterinary technician. Each said, when asked her occupation, "veterinary nurse."
September 03, 2003, 07:34
Kalleh
Do you know their education? I am assuming it is the same as our technicians.

The problem with the word "nurse" is that its etymology is from a Latin word "nutricius", meaning that suckles. It is certainly not an academic word; its synonyms revolve around nurture. Therefore, nurse is often used quite freely, thus confusing patients.

In fact, there has been talk in the U.S. of changing the word for nurse to something else, nurse being defined as one who receives a college degree from a nursing program. I wonder if there is precedent for changing the longtime name of a profession? Confused
September 03, 2003, 12:45
maxqnz
quote:
Originally posted by Kalleh:
I wonder if there is precedent for changing the longtime name of a profession? Confused


Here, chiropodists changed their designation to podiatrists, sometime in the late 70s or early 80s, to avoid confusion with chiropractors.
September 03, 2003, 14:19
Kalleh
Yes, I think we used to have chiropodists, too! I had forgotten all about them. Were they exactly the same as podiatrists? I ask because I looked "chiropodist" up in dictionary.com, and it said that they "especially remove bunions and corns" for one of the definitions.
September 03, 2003, 17:17
WinterBranch
quote:
You did post on July 5 about a Texas law outlawing ownership of six dildos. I guess five is ok.


There's very good reason why a woman can't own six--if I had another one, I wouldn't be on the internet, now would I? All commerce would cease to exist...packs of men would roam the streets wondering where the women went..

I'm sorry, everyone ignore that. My nemesis EvilWinterBranch took over my computer for a second. Wink

By the way, how many dildoes is a man allowed to own?

Actually, I don't want to know. Eek
September 04, 2003, 18:23
shufitz
Kalleh mentioned "a Texas law I read about last week: owning 6 dildos is a felony!"
Tinman observed, "I guess five is ok," and Winterbranch wondered, "How many dildoes is a man allowed to own?"

Your intrepid researcher reviewed the aptly named Penal Code.

CYA note: the author is not licensed to practice law in Texas, and expresses his interpretation solely as a lay person, not to be relied upon as legal advice.

[This message was edited by shufitz on Thu Sep 4th, 2003 at 18:33.]
September 04, 2003, 20:16
WinterBranch
Thank you for the info Mr. Fitz Smile

I would like to point out--that you can buy all this stuff over the counter and quite easily here in Texas. However, they are "adult novelties" and "gag gifts".

(No giggling from the back row at 'gag gifts'!)

And how do I know this? Well, a lady never tells. And neither do I. Wink
September 07, 2003, 01:07
tinman
I just read an article about a plastic surgeon, Dr. Charles Puckett, who reconstructs navels (umbilicoplasty), usually as part of a tummy tuck (Puckett tuck?) on his patients. He and his colleagues decided to determine the characteristics of the "ideal umbilicus". They took close-up photos of over 100 female volunteers, then convened a panel to rate them for attractiveness.

The result: "Bellybuttons should be relatively small, the study found. Outies are out, and so are large or distorted umbilci. Vertical navels are favored over horizontal ones. The right amount of 'hooding,' the fold of skin at the top of a navel, is another plus."

Dr. Puckett summed up: "If you have a basically attractive abdomen with an unattractive umbilicus, it kind of stands out like a sore thumb".

Umbilicus, sore thumb?

It sounds like there's a poem in here, somewhere. Anyone up to the challenge? (Let's see, now. What rhymes with Puckett?)

We could also do our own research. Just post a photo of your bellybutton ...

Tinman

P.S. I just found a couple online references, here and here.

[This message was edited by tinman on Sun Sep 7th, 2003 at 11:01.]
September 07, 2003, 10:56
tinman
quote:
Originally posted by tinman:
It sounds like there's a poem in here, somewhere. Anyone up to the challenge? (Let's see, now. What rhymes with Puckett?)

I'll start.

Dr. Puckett was a bellybutton man.
Me, I'm a bellybutton fan.
Outies are out;
Innies are in.
Bring on the photos;
Let the judging begin.

How about rewritting the Four Lads hit song, Standing on the Corner (1956)?

Standing on a corner, watching all the girls go by.
Standing on a corner, watching the umbilici.

Tinman
September 08, 2003, 15:08
C J Strolin
quote:
Originally posted by tinman:
Quite right. There is a book called _There is No Zoo in Zoology_ by Charles H. Elster (Collier Books, 1988)
There is also the book "There is No Cow in Moscow" along similar lines. I own a copy of both.

quote:
This would imply that they too have navels, yes?

No. The placenta in placental mammals (true mammals or eutherians) supplies nourishment to the embryo during the long gestation period.
Verrry interesting stuff and far more than I wanted to know about marsupials. (Possums can have up to 17 nipples - I'm a leg man myself.) I consider myself enriched and I give you my sincere thanks. No, really. (I sound sarcastic but I swear this isn't the case!)



I have often said that if I were ever to win one of the larger lotteries, one of the first things I would do would be to have my navel filled in and surgically covered over with a skin graft. Why? To freak out people on the beach, natch.
September 08, 2003, 15:14
C J Strolin
quote:
Originally posted by Richard English:
I learnt yesterday from an article in the "Radio Times" (arguably on of the UK's best written magazines and the one with fewest typographical and grammatical errors) that oral sex is illegal in many US States.

This is old news but just slightly. The U.S. Supreme Court recently ruled that it was unconstitutional for the police to arrest two gay men for engaging in oral sex in the privacy of their own home. This apparently gives the rest of us the green light as well.

As far as I'm concerned, whatever (1.) consenting (2.) adults do in (3.) privacy should be no one's damn business but their own. Satisfy those three constraints and whatever you want is fine by me!
September 08, 2003, 15:24
C J Strolin
quote:
Originally posted by WinterBranch:
I would like to point out--that you can buy all this stuff over the counter and quite easily here in Texas. However, they are "adult novelties" and "gag gifts".

"Spencer's" is a nation-wide chain of stores, usually found in malls, that sells some of the most outrageous "adult novelties" over here, all fully functional and produced to enhance the sexuality of a wide variety of the, shall we say, orgasm-impaired.

I was once in a Spencer's when I was approached by a woman who mistakenly took me for one of the store's employees. She asked me a technical question regarding a vibrator she had in her hand and, without missing a beat, I called out in a loud and clear voice "Customer needs assistance with dildoes! Customer needs assistance with the dildoes, please!"


Oh, yeah. I'm going to hell for sure...
September 10, 2003, 09:37
TrossL
ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha
I would have LOVED to be in that Spencers when you did that...
too funny...
September 10, 2003, 10:16
jerry thomas
C. J. wrote:

quote:
" ... ... all fully functional and produced to enhance the sexuality of a wide variety of the, shall we say, orgasm-impaired.

"I was once in a Spencer's ..... ....... without missing a beat ...."


Belonging to this community is a broadening enlightening educational experience. Some of us, fortunate enough to be unimpaired in that area, had never heard of Spencer's, nor their appliances and services, until you brought it up, so to speak, C.J. Cool
September 10, 2003, 14:17
shufitz
Despite modern technology, the best love is still hand-made.
September 10, 2003, 14:22
shufitz
quote:
Originally posted by C J Strolin:
She asked me a technical question regarding a vibrator ... I called out in a loud and clear voice "Customer needs assistance with dildoes"!
Just to be precise about this, aren't "vibrator" and "dildo" different things?
And CJ, your opinion on the subject is, as mine, inherently non-expert. Wink
September 10, 2003, 14:38
C J Strolin
Yes, you are correct, the basic difference is a simple one. Vibrators vibrate (D'uh!) and dildoes don't. BUT!! Your question brings up another aspect of this story that allows me to bring it around to the primary purpose of this board - various aspects of the English language.

Both items were present in the section we were standing in at the time so both "Customer needs attention with the vibrators" and "Customer needs attention with the dildoes" would have worked. The difference is that the word "dildoes" contains two D's and, as such, is an inherently funnier word than "vibrators."

Huge studies have been made in this area, many of which extoll the comedic virtues of the letters "P" and "K." "Pot roast" is funnier than "roast beef." "Pickle" is funnier than "Gramma died" etc etc etc.

And what I didn't mention in the story was that, for some now-forgotten reason, I had been under the impression that I would be able to get away with that line without the woman pressing charges. I was right and both she and the friend she was with laughed out loud at my, shall we say, indelicate request for assistance. And despite my best efforts to offer a personal alternative to the purchase in question, no, I went home alone.

Such is life in the big city...
September 10, 2003, 19:46
wordnerd
In checking to see whether the plural is dildos or dildoes (either is correct), I found that AHD says "origin unknown". But further research uncovers the following on this stimulating subject:

dildo - 1593, perhaps a corruption of I. deletto "delight," or (less likely) of Eng. diddle.

You pays your money, you takes your choices.
September 12, 2003, 03:23
the_bear
quote:
Originally posted by shufitz:
Despite modern technology, the best love is still hand-made.


Not at all. It's better in company Wink
September 12, 2003, 03:29
the_bear
quote:
Originally posted by Kalleh:
[...]

The problem with the word "nurse" is that its etymology is from a Latin word "nutricius", meaning _that suckles_.

[...]


Actually from nutrix, a provider of succour - goes the same was as executrix - though there is no male form Wink

Interestingly, for the name of Norris, that's the derivation of the surname.
September 16, 2003, 21:05
Kalleh
Since this seems to be our "official" dildo thread, I have to post about a synonym for dildo that I found while reading "Lysistrata": godemiche. Now, that is a more sophisticated word, isn't it? It even sounds a bit regal!
September 17, 2003, 15:22
WinterBranch
quote:
Since this seems to be our "official" dildo thread, I have to post about a synonym for dildo that I found while reading "Lysistrata": godemiche. Now, that is a more sophisticated word, isn't it? It even sounds a bit regal!


Of course, I had to google that word. Evidently, I'm set for a trip to France! I now know how to ask for the restroom and the correct word for dildo!

Plus I found this incredibly fun paragraph:
"Sexe sans tabou. Vidéos et photos gratuites. Site uniquement réservé aux adultes à la recherche de porno hard."

It sounds much more classy in French, doesn't it? Wink