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  • offensive language - Is schmuck really an obscene word? - English . . .
    Schmuck is supposedly an obscene Yiddish term for the male sex organ, yet it appears all of the time in the media as an American idiom for a jerk Can one use it in polite company?
  • Is it true that English has no future tense?
    You might wonder why 'will' isn't considered to definitively say that "English has a future tense" (in the pedantic sense that is In the less fully formal sense it totally says that English has a future tense) 'Will' is syntactically in the category of ' modal verbs ', can may must should etc Its meaning is certainly future time, but syntactically it is a helper (auxiliary) verb But
  • etymology - At what point did most English speakers know the joke . . .
    When is the first documented usage of the joke, "What time is it? Time for you to get a watch!"? At what point in history would most English-speakers know this joke, meaning, if you stopp
  • word choice - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Let's say we have a guy who is stupid and weak and everybody picks on him and mocks him all the time What would we call this guy? I found timid in the dictionary but I am looking for a colloquial
  • Why is Chaos pronounced with K not like SH? [closed]
    It's certainly from Hebrew or Aramaic originally, but in the New York area, there are a lot of Yiddish words used in such contexts divorced from their Hebrew connections, like "schmuck," "kibitz" or "schmooze " Some may originate from Hebrew or Aramaic, but the "Kh" sound is most associated with Yiddish, rather than with Hebrew directly
  • Schlong and its etymology - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Compare schmuck As a verb, "to have sex with," by 2005 Related: Schlonged; schlonging It does have a verbal usage, but strangely it says it started to be used in 1969 The linked Ngram Viewer seems to support it What is its etymology? How did it get its traction? Is the word shlong or sclung related with it? How vulgar is this word?
  • Is there a word for hate against religions or a specific religion . . .
    I realize that this might be difficult to answer because some religions closely identify with certain races and or nationalities If it makes it easier, the question can be narrowed down to Christianity, specifically, or broadened to describe a general hatred for all religion
  • What do you call someone who is being lied to? [closed]
    As with patsy, schmuck, mark, words used by con-artists to refer to their victims usually with negative connotations, possibly not what the OP is asking?
  • What do we call a non-technical person? [duplicate]
    When describing the process of explaining highly technical stuff to non-experts, I often call it translating the jargon into human
  • meaning in context - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Etymonline com gives a lot of definitions regarding an implement or instrument, specifically inanimate objects But the word has crept into English slang in reference to people, as in "he is a to





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