She’s pretty cool. She never can be serious. She doesn’t like school. She’s very athletic and Innocent she doesn’t care about what other people think of her. She usually love aqua🥰.
Urahara was the gamertag of the greatest
Freefire player of all time. A player like no other, the fastest and smartest. He was best known for his incredible speed and genius strategies.
The verb was first used in the meaning defined above in September 2019 after Urahara's great performance in Freefire global league, in which he excelled and demonstrated his fascinating abilities, therefore won. The verb is commonly used amongst the Freefire community.
*3 dead players of a team motivating their last teammate in a fight*
Uriyah: a person that will make you laugh if needed he does not like violence he is one of the most beautiful people you will meet he loves his friends he can be really mad a some points
He was admitted to the the half way house because he was an urbaholic.
Don and Gerard were worried about their friend because he was a cronic urbaholic.
British Hard Rock band, 1970-present. Uriah Heep's trademark combination of David Byron's theatrical lead vocals, Ken Hensley's fantasy-oriented lyrics and swirling Hammond organ, Mick Box's wah-wah guitar, Gary Thain and Lee Kerslake's powerhouse rhythm section, and five-part harmony backing vocals brought their "classic" lineup considerable success in the early 1970s; although never a superstar-level band in the US, they retain a significant following to this day worldwide, especially in Germany, Russia, The Netherlands, and Japan. The current (1985-present) lineup (Mick Box, Lee Kerslake, Trevor Bolder, Bernie Shaw and Phil Lanzon) maintain an active touring schedule, and released several albums during the 1990s, the most recent being 1998's "Sonic Origami"; a new studio effort has been promised for some time.
Essential Albums: Salisbury (1971), Look At Yourself (1971), Demons And Wizards (1972), The Magician's Birthday (1972), Sweet Freedom (1973), Firefly (1977), Sea Of Light (1995), Sonic Origami (1998), Acoustically Driven (2000)