I Hated You First

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He Hated Me First
He Hated Me First
Branded by her parents’ betrayal, Lyra Fenris has spent her life in chains of shame, hated, starved, and treated like dirt. But on her nineteenth birthday, her cruel Alpha, the very man who’s made her life a living hell, feels the unthinkable: the mate bond. Alpha Larry Talbot wants nothing more than to hate her…but his wolf has other plans. Their bond is savage. Their past is poison. And their future? Explosive. Love wasn’t part of the curse. But now, it might be their only salvation.
Not enough ratings
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34 Chapters
Hated mate
Hated mate
Synopis: The setting of the story was in Rome and Guidecca in Venice, in Europe; From the month of August to the month of December, in year 2000. It's a woman lead! It is a romantic story of werewolves. It all started in a dream where Lucinda, an Omega and the protagonist in the story, was being chased by a pack of female wolves led by a female Alpha. In the run for her life, Lucinda stumbled and fell down, now living in the mercy of the wolves. But before the wolves could harm her, she saw herself in a different scene in her dream, where a male wolf awaited to embrace her. Lucinda woke up on a tap by her mother, Mrs. Adeline, only to realize that she had been dreaming. Her mom told her to freshen up for there were visitors waiting for her in the sitting room. The visitors were Elders from a pack where Lucinda, the only werewolf in her family belonged. After the Elders had stated their mission, Mr. Gabriel, Lucinda's father agreed with his wife on the visitors' quest, and they made a trip to their hometown. In their hometown, Lucinda was welcomed to the pack in the pack house, as was due. Lucinda's stay was almost gaining to a perfect and peaceful stay, untill a female Alpha, Chloé came into her life. The Alpha and some members of the pack hated Lucinda, for she was desirable to a male Alpha, Jack, whom the group admired. Lucinda and Jack created romantic scenes that worsened Chloé's hatred for Lucinda.
2
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57 Chapters
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Alpha's Hated Mate
Alpha's Hated Mate
“I don't want to see this angelic face of hers that deceived me and murdered my child, she disgusts me, she is nothing but a worthless, good for nothing, liar. I was so good to her and this is how she repays me? I fucking loved her, I changed who I was for her sake. I put up with her annoying and embarrassing ass but you know what, take her back to Ryan if you must, I'm sure he was so relieved when I took her off his hands but even I regret taking her.” Camilla composes herself, finding her balance but still a crying mess. “You don't mean that, you're just mad. You love me, remember?” she mummers, her gaze drifting to Santiago. “Tell him he loves me and he's just mad.” she begs, when Santiago doesn't respond, she shakes her head, her gaze falling on Adrian again and he stares at her with disdain. “You said you love me forever.” she whispers. “No, I fucking hate you right now!” He yelled. ***** Camilla Mia Burton is a Wolf less seventeen-year-old with insecurities and fear of the unknown. She is a half-human part-werewolf; she's a powerful wolf even though unaware of the power within her and has a beast too a rare gem. Camilla is as sweet as she can be. However what happens when she meets her mate and he is not what she dreamed about? He is a cruel cold-hearted eighteen years old Alpha. He is ruthless and in disapproval of Mates he wants nothing to do with her. She endeavors to change his perception of how he sees things, yet he loathes and rejects her pushing her away but the mate bond proves to be strong. What will he do when he regrets rejecting and hating her?
8.1
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219 Chapters
Fated but Hated
Fated but Hated
Growing up side by side, as children of the pack Beta and Gamma, Lachlan and Seren should be the perfect pairing made by fate. But, after Lachlan’s father, the Beta of Black Crescent Pack died to save Seren’s life his son, Lachlan now holds nothing but resentment and hate for the beautiful young she-wolf. Coming of age is a date Lachlan has been waiting for. The date he will begin preparing to inherit his father’s title should be a special day for him, but instead is ruined by meeting his fated… The one person in the world he would not want to be fated to. The one person he hates most in the world. Seren. Surely fate would not be so cruel to fate him to the one he hates? But in a pack where tradition means rejection is frowned upon, Lachlan finds himself in a difficult situation. But, he has no intention of being with the person who causes him to live without his father. Can the two live in peace together with the matebond simmering?
9.7
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140 Chapters
Billionaire's Hated Wife
Billionaire's Hated Wife
"How about a one-night stand? You are the first and only person to ever show me your filthy middle finger! Don't you think I should show your place?" My frustration boils over hearing him, can't gather my thoughts over how dark the other side of the handsome face can be! ~~~~~~~~~~~~ Gracia Judy is a 25-year-old independent girl currently living alone in Canberra, the capital city of Australia. She is an orphan who was raised by her grandmother. She attains every virtue from her grandmother. Some days, Judy and Smith fall in love with each other. His presence makes her life heavenly. Everything is going well despite a lack of funds until she gets into an argument about her rights with a well-known, arrogant billionaire named Ellen John. How can the powerful, rich, and arrogant billionaire tolerate an ordinary girl’s pride? Her life turns upside down when she slaps him in return for his disrespectful words against her, and she becomes his one and only enemy, whom he keeps chasing nonstop to ruin her life. When she discovers his nefarious plot against her, she has no choice but to flee to avoid his lethal clutches. Ellen keeps looking for her everywhere; however, he finds no clue about her, but the real shock comes when he discovers his enemy standing in front of him as his bride!
8.6
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76 Chapters
Hated Luna, Reborn
Hated Luna, Reborn
In Elena’s past life, she was the hated Luna who did everything she could to please others, desperately chasing a love that was never returned. But in the end, it was her own fated mate, Alpha Killian, who betrayed her and sent her to her death. Blinded by lies, Killian believed she was trying to harm the woman he truly loved—Elena’s adoptive sister. What he never knew was that Elena died carrying his child. Fortunately, fate gave her a second chance. Reborn to a time before everything fell apart, Elena's love for Killian has turned into burning hatred. Now, all she wants is to escape him and make everyone who hurt her pay. But this time, the Alpha who once cast her aside refuses to let her go. Killian, once too proud to even look at her, now bows his head and begs her to stay by his side...
7.5
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125 Chapters

When Was Amabelle Jane Book First Published?

5 Answers2025-11-24 22:06:20

My copy of 'Amabelle Jane' still has the little imprint inside that tells the tale: it was first published in June 2014. I picked that paperback up at a tiny secondhand shop a few years after the release, but the publisher's colophon is clear—mid-2014 was when this story first hit shelves and digital stores alike.

Reading it felt like catching a late-summer movie; the timing of the release matched the gentle, sunlit mood of the book. There was a small reprint the following year to meet demand, and an illustrated edition came out later for readers who wanted the visuals to match the prose. If you’re hunting for a first-edition aesthetic, look for copies marked 2014 on the copyright page — that’s the original run, and it still gives me that warm, shelf-pride feeling.

Which Characters Ally With Rin The First Disciple In Fights?

2 Answers2025-11-24 15:40:59

My brain lights up whenever I think about 'Rin: The First Disciple' and the ragtag group that shows up whenever a fight gets messy. From my point of view after rereading the arcs a few times, Rin rarely fights alone — she draws people to her cause, and those allies shift depending on whether the threat is a street brawl, a clan duel, or a world-ending curse.

At the core of most battlelines you'll see a steady trio: Rin herself, the quiet swordsman Jun, and the tactician Mira. Jun is the blade who takes the frontline and draws attention, Mira handles positioning and traps, and Rin moves like a storm through the gaps they create. Then there’s Master Haru — not always present, but when he shows up he turns skirmishes into lessons, lending a stabilizing presence and a surprise counter-technique that flips the tempo. Outside that core, Rin often teams up with Hoku, a roguish archer who provides cover and comic relief, and Eira, a mystic who can bend short-range spiritual energy; together they form a flexible fight squad that can adapt to both street-level threats and supernatural opponents.

In larger-scale clashes the roster expands. You’ll see the allied militia led by Commander Rook, who brings numbers and siege know-how, and sometimes former rivals like Kaito — the ex-clan enforcer who, after a grudging arc of redemption, fights beside Rin when the stakes matter. Those temporary alliances are my favorite part: they show how Rin’s choices ripple outward, convincing foes to stand down and let bigger dangers take priority. Tactically, fights with Rin feel layered — melee, ranged, and spirit support all act in concert, and she’s the linchpin that pulls their strengths together.

I love watching how every ally’s personality changes how a fight unfolds: Jun’s stoicism makes battles feel honour-driven, Mira’s cleverness turns small spaces into chessboards, and Hoku’s lightness keeps things unpredictable. Even when the list of names shifts from chapter to chapter, the constant is Rin’s unshakeable drive — she makes people want to fight with her, not for her. That’s the heart of those confrontations, and it's what keeps me cheering every time the page turns.

Where Did Ill Own Your Mom First Originate Online?

3 Answers2025-11-03 13:03:35

Trying to trace the exact birthplace of the phrase 'I'll own your mom' is a little like archaeology for memes — fragments everywhere, no single ruin. I lean on the gaming world as the real crucible: trash talk, mom-jokes, and the verb 'own' (and its derivative 'pwn') were staples in early multiplayer games. In the late 1990s and early 2000s, IRC channels, MUDs and then competitive shooters like 'Counter-Strike' and RTS titles hosted armies of players who perfected insult-based humor. That mix of 'you got owned' and classic 'yo mama' jokes naturally morphed into lines like 'I'll own your mom' as a shock-value taunt.

From there it splintered across communities. Forums like Something Awful and imageboards such as 4chan helped normalize mean-spirited one-liners, while Xbox Live and PlayStation chat turned them into voice-ready barbs. YouTube comment sections and early meme compilations amplified the phrase further, so by the late 2000s it felt ubiquitous. Linguistically it’s just a collision: the gaming verb 'own' (or misspelled 'pwn') plus decades-old mom-focused insults.

I enjoy how phrases like this map the culture — they show how online spaces borrow, tinker, and re-spread language. It’s cringey, funny, and telling all at once; whenever I hear it, I’m reminded of late-night lobby matches and the weird poetic cruelty of internet humor.

When Was Things We Do In The Dark First Published?

6 Answers2025-10-28 01:41:09

Wow — if you’re asking about publication, 'Things We Do in the Dark' by Jennifer Hillier first hit shelves in October 2019. I picked up my copy around then, and it was released by Mulholland Books (an imprint that leans into dark thrillers), available in hardcover, ebook, and audiobook formats almost simultaneously.

The book’s timing felt right: psychological thrillers were riding high and Hillier’s voice—sharp, unflinching, with twists that land—made this one stand out. It follows a protagonist haunted by past crimes and the consequences that ripple into present-day life. Critics liked the pacing and character work, and readers who enjoy tense domestic noir often recommend it alongside similar titles. Personally, the way Hillier threads memory, guilt, and suspicion kept me turning pages late into the night — a proper page‑turner that lived up to the hype for me.

When Was Petunia Meaning In Hindi First Recorded In Texts?

3 Answers2025-11-05 00:49:16

I’ve always loved digging into word histories while pottering in my little balcony garden, and the story of 'petunia' spilling into Hindi is a neat mix of botany and colonial history.

The botanical name 'Petunia' traces back to South American roots — European botanists borrowed a Tupi word for tobacco via French 'petun' and Anglicized it into 'petunia' as the plants became popular in European gardens in the 18th and 19th centuries. Because English and Latin botanical names were the currency of horticulture, the plant shows up early in European floras and seed catalogues. In India, formal botanical work like 'Flora of British India' collected scientific names for plants during the late 19th century, but vernacular renderings often lagged behind.

When people started using a Hindi form, it was usually a straightforward transliteration — पेटुनिया or पेटूनिया — appearing in colonial-era gardening manuals, seed catalogues, and later in Hindi newspapers and horticultural pamphlets. My sense is that the first widespread appearances in Hindi print fall around the late 19th to early 20th century, when ornamental gardening became a hobby among English-educated Indians and local printers began reproducing plant lists. By mid-20th century, 'petunia' as a Hindi loanword was common in gardening columns and school textbooks. I like imagining old seed catalogues arriving in Calcutta or Bombay with those Latin names, and gardeners scribbling down पेटुनिया in the margins — it feels wonderfully tangible to me.

When Was Flamme Karachi First Published Or Released?

3 Answers2025-11-05 09:36:43

I first found out that 'Flamme Karachi' was initially released online on April 2, 2014, with a follow-up print release through a small independent press on March 10, 2015. The online debut felt like a midnight discovery for me — a short, sharp piece that gathered an enthusiastic niche following before anyone could slap a glossy cover on it. That grassroots online buzz is often how these things spread, and in this case it led to a proper printed edition less than a year later.

The printed run in March 2015 expanded the work: copy edits, an author afterward, and a handful of extra sketches and notes that weren't in the first upload. It was interesting to watch the shift from raw, immediate online energy to a slightly more polished, curated object. There were also a couple of small, region-specific translations that appeared over the next two years, which helped the title reach a wider audience than the original English upload ever did.

On a personal level, the staggered release gave me two different feelings about 'Flamme Karachi' — the online version felt urgent and intimate, and the print version felt like a celebratory formalization of something that had already proven it mattered. I still like revisiting both versions depending on my mood.

Where Did Chloe Ferry Revealing Photos First Surface Online?

5 Answers2025-11-06 10:49:17

I got pulled into the timeline like a true gossip moth and tracked how things spread online. Multiple reports said the earliest appearance of those revealing images was on a closed forum and a private messaging board where fans and anonymous users trade screenshots. From there, screenshots were shared outward to wider audiences, and before long they were circulating on mainstream social platforms and tabloid websites.

I kept an eye on the way threads evolved: what started behind password-protected pages leaked into more public Instagram and Snapchat reposts, then onto news sites that ran blurred or cropped versions. That pattern — private space → social reposts → tabloid pick-up — is annoyingly common, and seeing it unfold made me feel protective and a bit irritated at how quickly privacy evaporates. It’s a messy chain, and my takeaway was how fragile online privacy can be, which left me a little rattled.

When Did Sportacus First Appear And How Did Fans React?

4 Answers2025-11-06 16:57:40

Back in the mid-1990s I got my first glimpse of what would become Sportacus—not on TV, but in a tiny Icelandic stage production. Magnús Scheving conceived the athletic, upbeat hero for the local musical 'Áfram Latibær' (which translates roughly to 'Go LazyTown'), and that theatrical incarnation debuted in the mid-'90s, around 1996. The character was refined over several live shows and community outreach efforts before being adapted into the television series 'LazyTown', which launched internationally in 2004 with Sportacus as the show’s physical, moral, and musical center.

Fans’ reactions were a fun mix of genuine kid-level adoration and adult appreciation. Children loved the acrobatics, the bright costume, and the clear message about being active, while parents and educators praised the show for promoting healthy habits. Over time the fandom got lovingly creative—cosplay at conventions, YouTube covers of the songs, and handfuls of memes that turned Sportacus into a cheerful cultural icon. For me, seeing a locally born character grow into something worldwide and still make kids want to move around is unexpectedly heartwarming.

Where Can I Read Rin The First Disciple Fanfiction Online?

2 Answers2025-11-06 19:38:46

If you're hunting for fanfiction for 'Rin the First Disciple', there are a few places I always check first — and some tricks that usually surface the rarer gems. Archive of Our Own (AO3) is where I start when I want properly tagged, well-organized works. Use the site search with different combinations: try the full title in quotes, character names, or likely pairings. AO3's filters for language, rating, and tags make it easy to skip things you don't want, and the collection/kudos/bookmark system helps you track authors you like. FanFiction.net still hosts a massive archive too, though its tagging and search can be clunkier; if the story is older or crossposted, you'll often find mirror copies there.

If the work is originally in another language or is a web-novel, check places like NovelUpdates, Webnovel, or community-run translation blogs. I've found several 'hidden' translations that never made it to mainstream platforms by searching Google with site:novelupdates.com "Rin the First Disciple" and variations — that trick turns up forum threads, translator blogs, and occasionally PDF mirrors. Wattpad is hit-or-miss but can host original takes and shorter continuations; Tumblr and Twitter (X) tags sometimes lead to one-shots and mini-series, especially if the author self-posts. For contemporary fan communities, Reddit and Discord servers dedicated to the fandom are goldmines — people post links, fan-translation projects, and reading lists there. If you join a fandom Discord, you can often ask for recs and get direct links to chapter indexes or raw translations.

A few practical tips I use: try multiple spellings or abbreviations for 'Rin' and the title, because fanworks sometimes rename things (e.g., AUs, nicknames, or translations). Use Google advanced searches like site:archiveofourown.org "Rin the First Disciple" OR "Rin First Disciple" and include words like "fanfiction" or "fanfic". Pay attention to author notes and content warnings — some writers hide mature themes under vague titles. Finally, support translators and authors: leave kudos, comments, or tip links if available, and prefer official translations when they're out. I've found some of the warmest, wildest takes on 'Rin the First Disciple' by following these trails, and discovering them always feels like finding a secret stash of snacks on a late-night readathon — genuinely satisfying to stumble upon.

When Did Hyuga Senpai Fanfiction First Appear Online?

4 Answers2025-11-04 03:01:49

I got hooked on tracing fandom history a long time ago, and hunting down when a particular ship or character first appeared online feels like an archaeological dig I can’t resist.

If by 'Hyuga senpai' you mean a Hyuga character from a mainstream anime or manga — for example the Hyuga family from 'Naruto' — the very earliest fanworks would have started surfacing shortly after the source material became known internationally. The 'Naruto' manga began in 1999 and the anime aired in 2002, so small clusters of fanfiction, forum threads, and fan pages about Hyuga characters began appearing in the early 2000s. Before centralized hubs, people posted on message boards, personal web pages, and 'Usenet' or Yahoo Groups, which are harder to trace today.

By the late 1990s and early 2000s more visible archives like 'FanFiction.net' (which launched in 1998) and 'LiveJournal' communities made fanfiction easier to find and tag. Later, archives such as 'Archive of Our Own' in 2009 archived and formalized many fandoms. If you dig into Wayback Machine snapshots of fan archives or old forum threads, you can often spot the earliest Hyuga-centric stories — I always get a thrill finding those tiny, earnest posts from the early web.

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