Here's a coo coo error for the ages:
"โฆ move my hips, pushing more of my clock into her mouth."
I dunno how I feel about erotica based on the screwing mistakes of Flavor Flav from Public Enemy?
Maybe something like this:
https://www.amazon.com/Little-Rooster-Alarm-Vibrator-Champagne/dp/B01N0F9L78
Here's a coo coo error for the ages:
I think you mean a "cuckoo" error. Coo Coo is a Caribbean corn bread made of with okra, red bell peppers, and garlic and cooked in coconut milk. Super tasty, especially if you can get it fresh.
I think you mean a "cuckoo"
Yeah, but if you Google "coo coo clock" you get hits and one says: "The English spelling is a cuckoo clock, although may opt for the more phonetic version of coo-coo clocks."
But you're right.
Yeah, but if you Google "coo coo clock" you get hits
That's probably marketing strategy for Unilever's Dove Soap brand, and the bird that pops out of the coo coo clock on the hour to go 'coo coo' is 'body positive' ie not a skinny minnie.
AJ
Possibly, I'm not sure. The Caribbean languages are such a mess that it's hard to know where a lot of words come from. Worse, while the dish itself exists throughout the Caribbean, it's known by a bunch of different names.
For example, in Dominica it's called fungie while in Barbados it's called cou-cou, but if made without the okra in Barbados they also use the term fungie.
Meanwhile Ghana has a very similar dish eaten by a specific tribe in the south, but they call it banku. When I lived in Ghana we were told that the food had a heavy influence from Lebanon, so that could be a pathway for a couscous connection, but (a) the Lebanese went to western Africa in the 19th century fleeing the Ottoman Empire, so it's later than the slavery diaspora and (b) I'm not sure if they traded with the same tribe(s).