It's not a proper expression. The correct way to say it would be 'I alone am a novel reader' or 'I am the sole person who reads novels'. The given phrase 'only i am a reader novel' has the words in a jumbled and incorrect order which makes it hard to convey a clear meaning in standard English.
Definitely not. In proper English, we would say something like 'A girl adopts the ideas/concepts from the photographs in a novel' or use different words altogether. The given phrase is just a jumble of words that don't form a correct construction.
No, it's not a proper English expression. 'Jerkoff' is a vulgar term and using it in this way makes the whole phrase inappropriate and not suitable for formal or polite English usage.
Well, 'only i am a reader novel' might be a statement indicating that the person feels they are the sole individual engaged in the act of reading novels. It could be that in their immediate circle, no one else has the habit of reading novels, so they feel special in this regard. For example, if they are in a family where everyone is more into watching TV or playing games, and they are the only one who enjoys getting lost in the pages of a novel.
No. It is not a proper English expression. English has certain syntactic rules and this phrase violates them. 'Watch me' is okay on its own, but when combined with'suck him stories' it becomes an ungrammatical and rather confusing statement.
No, it's not a proper English expression in the traditional sense. It's very jumbled and unclear. Usually, in proper English, we would structure it more clearly, like 'A story about a dozen dogs that involves reading and counting.'
No. 'bhabhi' and 'choda' are not common English words. It looks like a jumble of words that might be from another language or just made - up in a non - standard way.
Definitely not. In proper English, we would not use such a combination of words. 'Ammapukuni' and 'pagaladenkina' are not recognized English terms, and the idea of a 'friend sex story' is also not an appropriate or common topic for normal English expressions. English expressions usually follow grammar rules and cultural norms, and this phrase violates both.
No. It's not a proper English expression. 'Wife gang' is an odd and unidiomatic collocation, 'fingered' is used in a very unclear and potentially inappropriate way without proper context, and 'dance story' is too general and doesn't seem to be connected in a proper syntactic or semantic way to the rest of the phrase.
No. It is not a proper English expression. The word 'cum' is inappropriate in this context and makes the whole phrase seem very strange and not at all a normal way of communicating in English.
No, it's not a proper English expression. In standard English, this combination of words doesn't make sense grammatically or semantically. It seems to be a jumbled or perhaps even a made - up phrase that doesn't follow the normal rules of the language.