Members Entrance
The Home Of BBW, Chubby & Plumpers!
ADULTS ONLY
This website contains sexually explicit material, and is for adult viewing only. If you are under the age of 18, please exit now by clicking the "Exit" button above. By Clicking the "Enter" button, you agree that you are at least 18 years of age, you are of legal age in your area to view sexually explicit material, you will not expose the contents of this web site to minors, you are wholly liable for any legal ramifications that may arise from your viewing or downloading material from this website, and you will subject yourself to the jurisdiction of the State of Florida should any dispute arise between yourself and the operators of this website.
.qytdtves { Vertical-align:top; Cursor: Pointe... May 2026
The CSS snippet you provided, .qYTdTVEs { vertical-align:top; cursor: pointer; ... } , appears to be an obfuscated or dynamically generated class name commonly found in the source code of results or other Google web applications.
: You may have copied this while looking at the source code of a Google search page. .qYTdTVEs { vertical-align:top; cursor: pointe...
If you are looking for a on how these systems work, you might be interested in the concept of CSS Modules or Atomic CSS , which explain why modern tech companies use these cryptic, non-human-readable class names. The CSS snippet you provided,
: Ensures that the element (likely an inline-block or table cell) aligns to the top of its line box or container. If you are looking for a on how
Because these class names are generated by automated build tools (like Closure Compiler), they do not represent a "paper" or a formal technical document. Instead, they are part of the functional styling for user interface elements, such as clickable snippets or layout containers. Technical Context of the Snippet
: Changes the mouse cursor to a "hand" icon, indicating to the user that the element is clickable. Why You Might Be Seeing This
: A randomized class selector. These are used to reduce file size and prevent external developers from easily "scraping" or styling the page in ways the provider doesn't intend.