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- Screw slang terms — are any socially acceptable?
This account indicates that ingratiation (or "screwing" into a person's acquaintance) was a standard tactic of prostitutes and their enablers in pursuing a particular entrapment con game Perhaps this tactic—or a more general notion of prostitutes attaching themselves (figuratively) to potential clients—led to an association of prostitutes
- The Old Lady Next Door (True Story) - Grasscity Forums
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- Origin of Screw the pooch - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
At Yale a friend of Rawlings', the radio DJ Jack May (a k a "Candied Yam Jackson") amended this term to "screwing the pooch" which was simultaneously less vulgar and more pleasing to the ear The unsourced part about Rawlings and May was added by an anonymous user in 2008 Since then, this information has been repeated on numerous websites
- Is Im screwed a rude expression? - English Language Usage Stack . . .
Robusto's response addresses the rudeness aspect of your question With regard to the second part, whether I'm screwed is "used when someone tries to say they made a mistake": I think you're confusing I'm screwed (which as the comments tell you means approximately "Aw, jeez, I'm in trouble") with I screwed up, which does mean "I've made a mistake"
- Screwed vs. nailed: why is the slang so different?
Interestingly, both ‘nail’ and ‘screw’ can refer to sexual intercourse—but with the very fundamental difference (borne over from the basic meanings of the word) that screwing someone just refers, in a roundabout way, to the general ‘in-out’ motions performed during sex, while nailing someone indicates that there is a nailer and a
- Is I f*cked the dog an actual idiom and are there alternatives
The commonest expression I can think of to express boredom is "to twiddle one's thumbs" "Screwing the pooch", while an idiom, has an entirely different meaning: to spectacularly mess up, usually in an embarrasingly public way
- phrase meaning - What does screw up one eye look like? - English . . .
This is an image of someone screwing up their entire face Imagine that, but more localized And you probably wouldn't close the eye completely, but rather leave a narrow gap remaining to look disprovingly at the person with Basically an extreme squint
- word usage - Is the phrase screw up or screwed up considered . . .
Anecdotally - Facebook considers it grounds for dismissal I once used it without really thinking it 'too rude' in a post in a [public open] sound engineering group about having got something wrong… to find I had not only been auto-ejected from the group but the group itself completely hidden from me
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