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#private plane
the-posh-life · 6 months
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mrs-trophy-wife · 5 months
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w2soneshots · 9 days
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Private plane bog👌🏼✈️
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misforgotten2 · 4 months
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It's attracting a lot of hangar-ons.
Life - November 17th 1947
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nocternalrandomness · 2 months
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Piper Seminole out of KFRG
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hellofaride2021 · 3 months
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Holy shit! She’s 77 on the list.
Until you start giving the other 76 the amount of hate Taylor’s received I want you all to shut the fuck up 🤣
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goaldiggerbaby · 11 months
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rizumuj · 8 months
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Fascinated by the various methods of transportation mr incredible used to get to his hotel room on no Nomanisan Island
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kingshook1 · 11 months
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the-posh-life · 2 years
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mrs-trophy-wife · 7 months
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lovelybyana · 8 months
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kp777 · 9 months
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Private jets are awful for the climate. It’s time to tax the rich who fly in them
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hellofaride2021 · 3 months
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Particular people are very quiet suddenly 🤔
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codagrooves · 10 months
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jhsharman · 11 months
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Boys, guys
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According to commonly held thought, though the sourcing on all the sites I see use a lot of "it is believed" -- the word "guy" was derived from Guido Fawkes, or Guy Fawkes, of the Gunpowder Plot of 1605 fame. Key evolutionary point feom Wikipedia:
In Britain, 5 November has variously been called Guy Fawkes Night, Guy Fawkes Day, Plot Night, and Bonfire Night (which can be traced directly back to the original celebration of 5 November 1605). Bonfires were accompanied by fireworks from the 1650s onwards, and it became the custom after 1673 to burn an effigy (usually of the pope) when heir presumptive James, Duke of York, converted to Catholicism. Effigies of other notable figures have found their way onto the bonfires, such as (all the noted politicians). The "guy" is normally created by children from old clothes, newspapers, and a mask. During the 19th century, "guy" came to mean an oddly dressed person, while in many places it has lost any pejorative connotation and instead refers to any male person and the plural form can refer to people of any gender (as in "you guys").
Mildly curious on a plausible rise of use as a standard in informal vernacular over, here we see boys -- which I think is the case.
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