So one of my wife’s friends is recently divorced and made a spur of the moment decision to go get a tattoo (which always turns out great, amirite?). Not bad work honestly, but it doesn’t say Follow your arrow, it says Fallow your arrow.
Now she and my wife just believe it’s a mistake and the artist is going to correct it.......but fallow IS a word and I remember using it when describing the female pigs (sows) when they aren’t pregnant back when my Dad was still raising pigs. There are other uses for the word......buuuuuuuut is it just me thinking that artist was low key being a dick?
English
#Offtopic
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13 RepliesNo ragrets!!
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3 RepliesEdited by man_of_war_r2: 7/11/2020 6:10:02 PMNever get a tattoo unless it's from an expensive artist.
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Fallow
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She's gonna regert that.
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Edited by Ghost Rider: 7/11/2020 1:24:53 AMThat is both sad and really funny. Edit: Fallow just means barren, doesn’t necessarily apply to pigs. [spoiler]Sorry, all out of salt.[/spoiler]
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1 ReplyI dunno but the innuendos are real.
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7 RepliesAnytime you talk to your wife’s friend you should replace the “o” with “a”. So maybe with a Boston accent?
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2 RepliesThis is precisely why, should I ever get a tattoo, I'd drop big money to get it from someone with a big reputation.
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1 Reply[quote]FAL'LOW, verb transitive To plow, harrow and break land without seeding it, for the purpose of destroying weeds and insects, and rendering it mellow. It is found for the interest of the farmer to fallow cold, strong, clayey land.[/quote]
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Idk but tattoo mistakes are pretty funny especially the Chinese ones where it’s supposed to say love or something but says something really weird like fish