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Posted

Something about a dick in a watch pocket....

Thats a southerism Bubba. It means that it is finer than frog hair. Which is another southernism. Both mean quite good.

For example, Did you see that the girl? Hell yeah Bubba she's finer than frog hair

Posted

Thats a southerism Bubba. It means that it is finer than frog hair. Which is another southernism. Both mean quite good.

For example, Did you see that the girl? Hell yeah Bubba she's finer than frog hair

Oh, I got it! I just felt that the phrase didn't get its due, just yet. It got a solid chuckle out of me when I read it.

Posted

I don't follow

 

There are words that are not said by today's youth. At least not w/ the same meaning or purpose. "Ride" could be used when talking about a car. "Hey, nice ride." Something like that. 

Posted

There are words that are not said by today's youth. At least not w/ the same meaning or purpose. "Ride" could be used when talking about a car. "Hey, nice ride." Something like that.

I thought you were using it as a verb which didn't make sense but as a noun? I don't know if I've ever used it that way and I'm 44.

Posted

I thought you were using it as a verb which didn't make sense but as a noun? I don't know if I've ever used it that way and I'm 44.

You never asked for a ride?

Posted

That one I've never heard

I'm not sure when it was first used, but my first exposure to it was here:

Thats a southerism Bubba. It means that it is finer than frog hair. Which is another southernism. Both mean quite good.

For example, Did you see that the girl? Hell yeah Bubba she's finer than frog hair

The way I heard it, it was referencing strength. Like "This liquor is so strong, it'll knock your Richard into your watch pocket."
Posted (edited)

How bout fa show and church. Fa show meaning ok or sure and church meaning ###### yeah or i agree

Fo sho? I haven't heard anyone use church since Snoop was dropping it in the early 90s.

 

You do know fo sho is short for "for sure"?

Edited by inkman
Posted

Fo sho? I haven't heard anyone use church since Snoop was dropping it in the early 90s.

 

You do know fo sho is short for "for sure"?

 

That's dope, yo! 

Posted

It's a source of legitimate confusion. Some time ago, I Googled it to be sure.

 

That said, when I first started seeing "Woah", I thought the writer was going for something more old west horse rider in nature -- woe-ah!

 

 

Please.

 

Before Anyone Else.

 

And please don't disrespect my bae -- or anyone else's -- with such harsh words.

That's the way I've always spelled it. No idea where I got it from. There's probably no correct spelling anyway. Especially if you look at how other languages try to express the same sounds.

 

This!

 

I also hear "sick" a lot, it seams.

 

That's been a long time, at least 10 years I think. (also, seems ;))

 

I don't have a window to slang; the youngest person I talk to on any regular basis is my wife, who is 9 days younger than I am. Everyone I work with closely is older than I am.

Posted

This!

 

 

That's been a long time, at least 10 years I think. (also, seems ;))

 

I don't have a window to slang; the youngest person I talk to on any regular basis is my wife, who is 9 days younger than I am. Everyone I work with closely is older than I am.

Dammit!

Posted

Bae... the worst of all the slang. It is short for Baby or babe as in she's my baby and I love her. I freaking hate it with a passion. "Y'all won't believe how much I love my Bae."  Burn in hell. 

agree 100%

Posted

I ran on a loop trail around a reservoir last night. I probably made four passes by this 13-ish year old boy who was fishing. When I was done he asked me how far I had run. I told him, then said, "But I'm really feeling it." He repeated "really feeling it" while chuckling. I later got the feeling "really feeling it" for a 50-year-old is not "really feeling it" for a 13-year-old. I have no idea how he took it, other than comically.

Posted

Finna, ting, tryna, af. Not gonna lie, I use some of those

You don't like tryna? What about hafta and gonna? I've always been a proponent of spelling things the way we say them, especially when it comes to combinations of words.
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