by WiiSports June 8, 2019

V-TIK is a sexy chinese indian man who is in aa intimate relationship with Lberon James, he has a huge penis that is 0.5 inches at erect. He also is gay and humps people for fun.
by ronaldo jr. October 10, 2023

by Kenev January 5, 2024

Person 1: Hey! Did you find my candy stash because someone did?!
Person 2: Yeah, I am sorry for taking all the candy. It was to good to resist! ^v^''
Person 2: Yeah, I am sorry for taking all the candy. It was to good to resist! ^v^''
by ^v^'' October 21, 2020

by Varanthepussy May 20, 2022

cool and very smart nerd who really likes her friends and is the awesomest and smartest person alive
by tireddpperson June 11, 2024

V, or v, is the twenty-second and fifth-to-last letter in the modern English alphabet and the ISO basic Latin alphabet.
Miscellaneous
(1) V does not normally occur after u, since until u and v were regularly distinguished, the sequence uv could equally be read as vu, vv, uu (but note for example uvular). A preceding u-sound is therefore commonly written o, as in dove, love, glove, cover, discovery. However, a modern mock-spelling such as luv for love doubly flouts the conventions, with preceding u and final v. (2) In the 16c, nevewe was respelt nephew, and now usually has a spelling pronunciation with /f/ (but compare French neveu). Similarly, Stephen/Steven are variants, both with a /v/ pronunciation, and etymological variation between b and v occurs in devil/diabolical. (3) Oral variation between v/w formerly occurred in COCKNEY: Sam Weller in DICKENS's Pickwick Papers (1836–7) spells his name Veller, and his father refers to the letter v as we. See, F, U, W
(1) V does not normally occur after u, since until u and v were regularly distinguished, the sequence uv could equally be read as vu, vv, uu (but note for example uvular). A preceding u-sound is therefore commonly written o, as in dove, love, glove, cover, discovery. However, a modern mock-spelling such as luv for love doubly flouts the conventions, with preceding u and final v. (2) In the 16c, nevewe was respelt nephew, and now usually has a spelling pronunciation with /f/ (but compare French neveu). Similarly, Stephen/Steven are variants, both with a /v/ pronunciation, and etymological variation between b and v occurs in devil/diabolical. (3) Oral variation between v/w formerly occurred in COCKNEY: Sam Weller in DICKENS's Pickwick Papers (1836–7) spells his name Veller, and his father refers to the letter v as we. See, F, U, W
by small cocknballics August 16, 2022
