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An image of Larime
An image of Larime
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Larime

52 / M / straight / Available

Shelton, Connecticut

The Skinny

Last Online
Join Date
Ethnicity
White
Height
Body Type
Looking For
New friends, Activity partners, Long-distance penpals, Casual sex
Smokes
No
Drinks
Rarely
Drugs
Never
Religion
Christianity
Sign
Aquarius and it’s fun to think about
Education
Graduated from college/university
Job
Rather Not Say
Income
Rather not say
Kids
Has 1 child
Pets
Owns dogs
Languages
English (Fluently)

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Your Notes

Edit your notes

I am logical, realistic, and analytical.

My Self-Summary

I am here to see what this is all about. To see who else is on this portal and to take the funny tests I see.

I do enjoy all sorts of music, well maybe not opera (I don't speak the language and unless you are there, live, to see it it loses much).

I will come back later and fill in more if I am interested and see the value in doing so.

What I’m doing with my life

Typically my life is full of work and projects, while endeavoring to be a courteous co-sojourner of this globe we call earth.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search

"The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog" is a pangram (a phrase that uses all the letters of the alphabet) that has been used to test typewriters and computer keyboards because it is coherent and short. It was known in the late 19th century, and Baden-Powell's book Scouting for Boys (1908) used the phrase as a practice sentence for signaling.[1] It appears as a sample typing practice in L. Bronson's, Illustrative Shorthand, 1888. [2] In the January 10, 1903 issue of Pitman's Phonetic Journal, it is referred to as "the well known memorized typing line embracing all the letters of the alphabet".[3]

Many minor variations exist, including replacing one of the "the"s with an "a". Although it is the most popular, many other pangram sentences are shorter, such as "The five boxing wizards jump quickly."[4]

I’m really good at

Certainly not filling in these boxes

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search

"The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog" is a pangram (a phrase that uses all the letters of the alphabet) that has been used to test typewriters and computer keyboards because it is coherent and short. It was known in the late 19th century, and Baden-Powell's book Scouting for Boys (1908) used the phrase as a practice sentence for signaling.[1] It appears as a sample typing practice in L. Bronson's, Illustrative Shorthand, 1888. [2] In the January 10, 1903 issue of Pitman's Phonetic Journal, it is referred to as "the well known memorized typing line embracing all the letters of the alphabet".[3]

Many minor variations exist, including replacing one of the "the"s with an "a". Although it is the most popular, many other pangram sentences are shorter, such as "The five boxing wizards jump quickly."[4]

The first things people usually notice about me

My smile :-)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search

"The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog" is a pangram (a phrase that uses all the letters of the alphabet) that has been used to test typewriters and computer keyboards because it is coherent and short. It was known in the late 19th century, and Baden-Powell's book Scouting for Boys (1908) used the phrase as a practice sentence for signaling.[1] It appears as a sample typing practice in L. Bronson's, Illustrative Shorthand, 1888. [2] In the January 10, 1903 issue of Pitman's Phonetic Journal, it is referred to as "the well known memorized typing line embracing all the letters of the alphabet".[3]

Many minor variations exist, including replacing one of the "the"s with an "a". Although it is the most popular, many other pangram sentences are shorter, such as "The five boxing wizards jump quickly."[4]

My favorite books, movies, music, and food

hmm, so many to choose from and since I live pretty much in the moment, I tend to forget those of past encounters, until they reveal themselves to me again.

Books: Books by DeMille, Cussler, some King, some Rice, some Evanovich, and others in that genre. I am currently reading A New Earth by Eckhart Tolle.

Movies: I like the classics with Bogart and Bacall, Audrey Hepburn, Cary Grant and many more.

Music: Almost anything except opera and some RAP is not so good

Food: anything not fast food. I will try almost anything healthy

The six things I could never do without

air
water
food
sex
sleep
My five or six senses

Not necessarily in the same order at all times

I spend a lot of time thinking about

beautiful women
Thanks for taking the T and A and C test! Based on your selections, the results are clear: you show an attraction to smaller breasts, smaller asses, and cuter composure than others who've taken the test.

Note that you scored low on both breast and ass size. This means you appreciate thinner, harder bodies. You are most likely to appreciate a super-model. Relatively, you are less attracted to round, soft, sloppy women.

My third variable, "cuteness" is a mostly objective measure of how innocent a given model looked. It's determined by a combination of a lot of factors: lack of dark eye makeup, facial expression, posture, etc. If you scored high on that variable, you are either really nice OR you're into deflowering teens. If you scored low, you are attracted to raunchier, sexier, women. In your case, your higher than average score suggests you appreciate a cuter, more innocent look. Kudos!

Recommended Celebrities: Jessica Alba, an absolute goddess, and Natalie Portman, if you can handle her acting.

On a typical Friday night I am

having a nice glass of red wine or mixed adult beverage before enjoying more intimate pleasures and indulgences

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search

"The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog" is a pangram (a phrase that uses all the letters of the alphabet) that has been used to test typewriters and computer keyboards because it is coherent and short. It was known in the late 19th century, and Baden-Powell's book Scouting for Boys (1908) used the phrase as a practice sentence for signaling.[1] It appears as a sample typing practice in L. Bronson's, Illustrative Shorthand, 1888. [2] In the January 10, 1903 issue of Pitman's Phonetic Journal, it is referred to as "the well known memorized typing line embracing all the letters of the alphabet".[3]

Many minor variations exist, including replacing one of the "the"s with an "a". Although it is the most popular, many other pangram sentences are shorter, such as "The five boxing wizards jump quickly."[4]

The most private thing I’m willing to admit here

I prefer to tell My privates in a one on one setting or in small groups ;)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search

"The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog" is a pangram (a phrase that uses all the letters of the alphabet) that has been used to test typewriters and computer keyboards because it is coherent and short. It was known in the late 19th century, and Baden-Powell's book Scouting for Boys (1908) used the phrase as a practice sentence for signaling.[1] It appears as a sample typing practice in L. Bronson's, Illustrative Shorthand, 1888. [2] In the January 10, 1903 issue of Pitman's Phonetic Journal, it is referred to as "the well known memorized typing line embracing all the letters of the alphabet".[3]

Many minor variations exist, including replacing one of the "the"s with an "a". Although it is the most popular, many other pangram sentences are shorter, such as "The five boxing wizards jump quickly."[4]

You should message me if

you happen to be a female that is funny, gorgeous, sexy, optimistic, alive.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search

"The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog" is a pangram (a phrase that uses all the letters of the alphabet) that has been used to test typewriters and computer keyboards because it is coherent and short. It was known in the late 19th century, and Baden-Powell's book Scouting for Boys (1908) used the phrase as a practice sentence for signaling.[1] It appears as a sample typing practice in L. Bronson's, Illustrative Shorthand, 1888. [2] In the January 10, 1903 issue of Pitman's Phonetic Journal, it is referred to as "the well known memorized typing line embracing all the letters of the alphabet".[3]

Many minor variations exist, including replacing one of the "the"s with an "a". Although it is the most popular, many other pangram sentences are shorter, such as "The five boxing wizards jump quickly."[4]