The person above you probably smells like:
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LOVE0
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jasmine0
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Sunshine0
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Things you find in a queen size bed0
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Icy hot and CK0
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Tattoo ink and vasoline0
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joshua3179 wrote: »Tattoo ink and vasoline
@joshua3179 - beer, peanuts, smoke and a night of no regrets. However I like the icy hot and Ck smell better...
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snow0
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sandalwood0
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FrozenSongBird wrote: »joshua3179 wrote: »Tattoo ink and vasoline
@joshua3179 - beer, peanuts, smoke and a night of no regrets. However I like the icy hot and Ck smell better...
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Hummmm, pink kool-aid0
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joshua3179 wrote: »FrozenSongBird wrote: »joshua3179 wrote: »Tattoo ink and vasoline
@joshua3179 - beer, peanuts, smoke and a night of no regrets. However I like the icy hot and Ck smell better...
now I just wanna smell you.
@MissHodge64 - White Rain and Dior
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she smells like @joshua3179 She was rubbing up against him.0
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peaches?0
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red hot candies.0
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FrozenSongBird wrote: »joshua3179 wrote: »FrozenSongBird wrote: »joshua3179 wrote: »Tattoo ink and vasoline
@joshua3179 - beer, peanuts, smoke and a night of no regrets. However I like the icy hot and Ck smell better...
now I just wanna smell you.
@MissHodge64 - White Rain and Dior
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she smells like @joshua3179 She was rubbing up against him.
She snuggled me0 -
Beer?0
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Mango Body Butter0
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coconuts0
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My Hockey Jersey0
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Primal_Warrior_ wrote: »My Hockey Jersey
haha if I didnt play hockey i might take offence to that..... hockey jerseys are stinkkkkky0 -
Honey, spice and all things nice0
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She probably smells like this:
In humans, olfaction occurs when odorant molecules bind to specific sites on the olfactory receptors. These receptors are used to detect the presence of smell. They come together at the glomerulus, a structure which transmits signals to the olfactory bulb (a brain structure directly above the nasal cavity and below the frontal lobe).[2] Many vertebrates, including most mammals and reptiles, have two distinct olfactory systems—the main olfactory system, and the accessory olfactory system (used mainly to detect pheromones). For air-breathing animals, the main olfactory system detects volatile chemicals, and the accessory olfactory system detects fluid-phase chemicals.[3] Olfaction, along with taste, is a form of chemoreception. The chemicals themselves that activate the olfactory system, in general at very low concentrations, are called odorants. Although taste and smell are separate sensory systems in land animals, water-dwelling organisms often have one chemical sense.
(Thanks, Wikipedia) :P0 -
DenDweller wrote: »She probably smells like this:
In humans, olfaction occurs when odorant molecules bind to specific sites on the olfactory receptors. These receptors are used to detect the presence of smell. They come together at the glomerulus, a structure which transmits signals to the olfactory bulb (a brain structure directly above the nasal cavity and below the frontal lobe).[2] Many vertebrates, including most mammals and reptiles, have two distinct olfactory systems—the main olfactory system, and the accessory olfactory system (used mainly to detect pheromones). For air-breathing animals, the main olfactory system detects volatile chemicals, and the accessory olfactory system detects fluid-phase chemicals.[3] Olfaction, along with taste, is a form of chemoreception. The chemicals themselves that activate the olfactory system, in general at very low concentrations, are called odorants. Although taste and smell are separate sensory systems in land animals, water-dwelling organisms often have one chemical sense.
(Thanks, Wikipedia) :P
So....do i need deodorant of something?0 -
DenDweller wrote: »She probably smells like this:
In humans, olfaction occurs when odorant molecules bind to specific sites on the olfactory receptors. These receptors are used to detect the presence of smell. They come together at the glomerulus, a structure which transmits signals to the olfactory bulb (a brain structure directly above the nasal cavity and below the frontal lobe).[2] Many vertebrates, including most mammals and reptiles, have two distinct olfactory systems—the main olfactory system, and the accessory olfactory system (used mainly to detect pheromones). For air-breathing animals, the main olfactory system detects volatile chemicals, and the accessory olfactory system detects fluid-phase chemicals.[3] Olfaction, along with taste, is a form of chemoreception. The chemicals themselves that activate the olfactory system, in general at very low concentrations, are called odorants. Although taste and smell are separate sensory systems in land animals, water-dwelling organisms often have one chemical sense.
(Thanks, Wikipedia) :P
So....do i need deodorant of something?
It's a play on words. That's how people smell. (The act of smelling, instead of the state of being smelly.)
So, no, no deodorant. But, maybe some ego desensitizing cream.0 -
Roast Beef, simply appetizing0
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Chanel No. 5
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