Comments
Meet This "Sugar Baby" Girl Who Charges Older Men $500 A Date. Here's What She Does 2 comments
guest
· 6 years ago
I am an older man, and I'm just imagining how much fun I'd have if I took my wife on a $500 date...both on the date and then afterwards. If I weren't married, I'll net I could find a woman who'd be a lot of fun on such a date, and wouldn't be a "pro," although she might just be "regular pretty" vs. arm candy. Honestly, I'd feel like a fool spending that kind of money on such a vapid gold digger.
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Priorities are mixed up 6 comments
I'm not crying you are 7 comments
Antoher one bites the dust 6 comments
guest
· 6 years ago
I'm taller than my boyfriend by an inch or two and I have no fucks to give about that. It's only a bit awkward while ballroom dancing but even that isn't a big deal as I generally don't wear high heels.
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I would wear it, cause I say this all this the time! 6 comments
guest
· 6 years ago
Yuuuuup. Every D A M N TIME!!! The infamous 10mm will disappear an only reappear when ya either go get another one or worst case ya buy another one.
I need backup now! 16 comments
guest
· 6 years ago
It is a Christmas movie because Christmas is important to the plot. Gruber plans for the heist to happen during the company's Christmas party so the building would be mostly empty, and they could get to Takagi. Maclean is in LA to visit his wife because it's Christmas.
Nightmare fuel 11 comments
guest
· 6 years ago
For those who like this an don’t know the name of the comic. It’s calles Gone with the Blastwave @ Blastwave-comic(dot)com. It’s actually really good!!
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Three forgotten who saved the world 5 comments
Is this true? 14 comments
guest
· 6 years ago
humanity, a devoted family man who hated being away from home, from his wife and children; who hated it so much, it eventually killed him."
But the only real difference in meaning between pussy and pussycat as descriptions of (let's say) male non-torturers is that pussy has negative connotations (and a widely-accepted current association with a taboo word), while pussycat is positively evaluated.
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But the only real difference in meaning between pussy and pussycat as descriptions of (let's say) male non-torturers is that pussy has negative connotations (and a widely-accepted current association with a taboo word), while pussycat is positively evaluated.
Is this true? 14 comments
guest
· 6 years ago
used in colloquial English for 500 years, and similarly has no connection with pusillanimous or any other Latinate word.
* There's no positive evidence for the pusillanimous pussy derivation as a genuine historical source — it seems to be a sporadic folk etymology.
* The pronunciation difference (onset [pj] vs. [p], vowel [ʊ] vs. [u]) makes the pusillanimous pussy derivation implausible in any case.
The idea that the "weakling" sense of pussy should be treated as a taboo word because of a connection to the slang term for female genitals seems to be almost as historically incorrect as the pusillanimous pussy theory. When Paul Krugman wrote in 2008 "I'm a pussycat", the New York Times editorial board didn't need to intervene to enforce their policies on taboo language. Nor was any problem perceived in the recent NYT obituary for Phil Pepe, which quotes his column on Thurman Munson:
“Down deep he was a pussycat, a man of compassion and understanding and great human
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* There's no positive evidence for the pusillanimous pussy derivation as a genuine historical source — it seems to be a sporadic folk etymology.
* The pronunciation difference (onset [pj] vs. [p], vowel [ʊ] vs. [u]) makes the pusillanimous pussy derivation implausible in any case.
The idea that the "weakling" sense of pussy should be treated as a taboo word because of a connection to the slang term for female genitals seems to be almost as historically incorrect as the pusillanimous pussy theory. When Paul Krugman wrote in 2008 "I'm a pussycat", the New York Times editorial board didn't need to intervene to enforce their policies on taboo language. Nor was any problem perceived in the recent NYT obituary for Phil Pepe, which quotes his column on Thurman Munson:
“Down deep he was a pussycat, a man of compassion and understanding and great human
Is this true? 14 comments
guest
· 6 years ago
pusillanimis < pusillus "small, insignificant" + anima "breath, spirit". And it does have a similar meaning ("Of a person: lacking in courage or strength of purpose; faint-hearted, craven, cowardly"), which has made the folk etymology seem plausible to some. But aside from the lack of evidence for any historical connection, the divergent pronunciation of the first syllables argues against any notion that pussy is just a shortened form of pusillanimous: [pʊ] vs. [pju].
So to sum up:
* There's a plausible and well documented etymology for the sense of pussy in question, namely puss + y pussy = childish or colloquial word for "pet cat" term of endearment for a woman sweet or amiable woman sweet or effeminate man weakling/coward/sissy, with the parallel development of pussy = female genitals lurking somewhere in the background.
* Puss is Germanic in origin, and definitely is not a shortened form of the Latinate word pusillanimous. The hypocoristic ending -y has been widely
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So to sum up:
* There's a plausible and well documented etymology for the sense of pussy in question, namely puss + y pussy = childish or colloquial word for "pet cat" term of endearment for a woman sweet or amiable woman sweet or effeminate man weakling/coward/sissy, with the parallel development of pussy = female genitals lurking somewhere in the background.
* Puss is Germanic in origin, and definitely is not a shortened form of the Latinate word pusillanimous. The hypocoristic ending -y has been widely
Is this true? 14 comments
guest
· 6 years ago
uncertain (perhaps ultimately simply representing a call to attract a cat); compare also Lithuanian puižė , familiar name for a cat, puž , puiž , call to attract a cat, Irish puisín (with diminutive suffix) pussy cat, (regional) puis puis , call to attract a cat.
And the diminutive/hypocoristic ending -y-ie has been around since the early 16th century:
Used to form pet names and familiar diminutives. The forms -y and -ie are now almost equally common in proper names as such, but in a few instances one or other spelling is preferred, as Annie, Betty, Sally (rather than Anny, Bettie, Sallie); in the transferred applications of these, as jemmy, tommy, dicky, and the like, -y prevails; in general hypocoristic forms -ie is the favourite spelling after Scottish usage, as dearie, mousie.
There may be some connection to Dutch -je, but this is apparently at best conjectural.
Nowhere in all of this is pusillanimous mentioned. That word comes from French pusillanime / post-classical Latin
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And the diminutive/hypocoristic ending -y-ie has been around since the early 16th century:
Used to form pet names and familiar diminutives. The forms -y and -ie are now almost equally common in proper names as such, but in a few instances one or other spelling is preferred, as Annie, Betty, Sally (rather than Anny, Bettie, Sallie); in the transferred applications of these, as jemmy, tommy, dicky, and the like, -y prevails; in general hypocoristic forms -ie is the favourite spelling after Scottish usage, as dearie, mousie.
There may be some connection to Dutch -je, but this is apparently at best conjectural.
Nowhere in all of this is pusillanimous mentioned. That word comes from French pusillanime / post-classical Latin
Is this true? 14 comments
guest
· 6 years ago
Longford.
1925 S. Lewis Martin Arrowsmith vi. 65 You ought to hear some of the docs that are the sweetest old pussies with their patients—the way they bawl out the nurses.
1934 M. H. Weseen Dict. Amer. Slang 193 Pussy, an effeminate boy.
And of course also sense A.3.a (noted as coarse slang) "The female genitals; the vulva or vagina", with citations from 1699 forwards, and various extensions and expressions thereon based.
The OED separates out the adjectival uses as subentry B., glossed "Exhibiting characteristics associated with a cat; cat-like. Also (in later use chiefly): weak, cowardly".
The etymology of pussy is fairly straightforward: the base puss is
Apparently a word inherited from Germanic. Apparently cognate with Dutch poes cat, also call-name for a cat (1683; also puis 1561), Middle Low German pūse , German regional (Low German) Puus cat (also Puus-katte , Puus-man ), Danish pus , call-name for a cat, Swedish regional pus (also katte-pus ); further etymology
1925 S. Lewis Martin Arrowsmith vi. 65 You ought to hear some of the docs that are the sweetest old pussies with their patients—the way they bawl out the nurses.
1934 M. H. Weseen Dict. Amer. Slang 193 Pussy, an effeminate boy.
And of course also sense A.3.a (noted as coarse slang) "The female genitals; the vulva or vagina", with citations from 1699 forwards, and various extensions and expressions thereon based.
The OED separates out the adjectival uses as subentry B., glossed "Exhibiting characteristics associated with a cat; cat-like. Also (in later use chiefly): weak, cowardly".
The etymology of pussy is fairly straightforward: the base puss is
Apparently a word inherited from Germanic. Apparently cognate with Dutch poes cat, also call-name for a cat (1683; also puis 1561), Middle Low German pūse , German regional (Low German) Puus cat (also Puus-katte , Puus-man ), Danish pus , call-name for a cat, Swedish regional pus (also katte-pus ); further etymology
Is this true? 14 comments
guest
· 6 years ago
The pusillanimous pussy theory is "preposterous balderdash, or if you prefer, utter bullshit".
The details: What helps to clear this up is the Oxford English Dictionary.
The OED glosses pussy 2 as (sense A.1.a.) "A girl or woman exhibiting characteristics associated with a cat, esp. sweetness or amiability", with citations back to the 15th century:
a1560 in T. Wright Songs & Ballads Reign Philip & Mary (1860) lxxiv. 209 Adew, my pretty pussy, Yow pynche me very nere.
1583 P. Stubbes Anat. Abuses sig. Hv, You shall haue euery sawcy boy..to catch vp a woman & marie her… So he haue his pretie pussie to huggle withall, it forceth not.
Then there's an extended sense, glossed as "slang (chiefly N. Amer.). A sweet or effeminate male; (in later use chiefly) a weakling, a coward, a sissy. Also: a male homosexual", with the earliest citations from the first half of the 20th century:
1904 ‘M. Corelli’ God's Good Man xxi, I shall invite Roxmouth and his tame pussy, Mr. Marius
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The details: What helps to clear this up is the Oxford English Dictionary.
The OED glosses pussy 2 as (sense A.1.a.) "A girl or woman exhibiting characteristics associated with a cat, esp. sweetness or amiability", with citations back to the 15th century:
a1560 in T. Wright Songs & Ballads Reign Philip & Mary (1860) lxxiv. 209 Adew, my pretty pussy, Yow pynche me very nere.
1583 P. Stubbes Anat. Abuses sig. Hv, You shall haue euery sawcy boy..to catch vp a woman & marie her… So he haue his pretie pussie to huggle withall, it forceth not.
Then there's an extended sense, glossed as "slang (chiefly N. Amer.). A sweet or effeminate male; (in later use chiefly) a weakling, a coward, a sissy. Also: a male homosexual", with the earliest citations from the first half of the 20th century:
1904 ‘M. Corelli’ God's Good Man xxi, I shall invite Roxmouth and his tame pussy, Mr. Marius
Goth girl 16 comments
Shitposting irl 17 comments
guest
· 6 years ago
Oh my GOD. If you don’t “get” the humor sensibilities of someone who doesn’t look like you, SHUT UP. Stop being butt-hurt because people have different thoughts than you. Dumbass
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It Just Couldn't Have Been Said Any Better 17 comments
Funsubstance have a new Owner. 67 comments
WTH?!?! I don't understand the world anymore 9 comments
American school in one pic 12 comments
End of the world 3 comments
guest
· 6 years ago
When that fish in the sea you used to date tries to come back but you've evolved
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Funsubstance have a new Owner. 67 comments
Together again after so many years 10 comments
guest
· 6 years ago
I'm old. I was in college when my sister was enamored with this show. I never got the appeal. I'm not some anti-fun "this generation sucks" fucker. I love Spongebob. To me, it's the show of the generation, on par with Seinfeld from the previous generation.
Safety specs saved this guy's eye from an exploding angle grinder disc 11 comments
guest
· 6 years ago
Working a few a few decades in a manufacturing environment, this kind of thing happened regularly. Our saying is, "foresight is better than no sight." Wear your damn safety glasses (or in some cases, face shields).
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I love this comedian 36 comments
guest
· 6 years ago
The USA has so much more violence because you let in all those groups who use violence to,settle arguments and to increase their gangs' drug selling territories. It's easier to have cultural unity and peace when there's racial homogeneity.
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I need backup now! 16 comments
guest
· 6 years ago
Watch Comedy Central's "Bruce Willis Roast"...he specifically said, he agreed to be roasted to set the record straight "Die Hard IS NOT A CHRISTMAS MOVIE!". As much as we would like it to be. Sorry folks!
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'But its still cold in the winter' 13 comments
guest
· 6 years ago
Can anyone provide an accurate temperature within 2 degrees for the next 5 Saturdays? No, didn’t think so. But climate models that are redacted every 3 years are telling us that taxation will control the weather next century. cmon fam, don’t let them play you like that.
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'But its still cold in the winter' 13 comments
Has anyone ever told you you're beautiful? 3 comments
guest
· 6 years ago
While I understand wanting to say something nice and feeling like people shut you down, I suggest you try “How are you today?” instead of “Has anyone ever told you you’re beautiful?”. It’s seriously a massively uncomfortable question to be asked by a stranger (especially if you’re a young lady by yourself). Last time I was asked it I felt very unsafe, not very complicated.
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title 2 comments
Applies for dogs too 33 comments
guest
· 6 years ago
I get the idea behind this, but I mean let someobe adopt what they want. Not everyone is adopting a pet simply to save animals, they may GENUINELY havea specific breed they want, and if theu want it purebred who are you to judge? Personally, I would choose whatever looked most in need, but I dont disparage people for choosing based on pther criteria
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