You know what's ironic? The same people probably wouldn't bat an eye at somebody saying they got "gypped", even though that IS a reference to exactly what you think it is.
And it'll have the added bonus of this!Dead Century said:Hey, OP. Maybe you should eat one of these. I think you must get a little British when you're hungry. XD
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In all seriousness, I have heard snigger before, but most people here in Canada just use snicker.
For the longest time I got confused when news articles on this site referred to Nintendo as "The Big N".shootthebandit said:Whats an SJW? (PM me if you dont want to say it) im just curiousEamar said:I've been called an SJW in the past
This is what happens when people use phrases like the N-word. Without actually referring to it its not clear you could mean "nipple" or "nincompoop".
You are either in the 90% of people that know what it means so whats the difference between saying "******" or "the N-word" when it means the same thing. Then theres the 10% who dont have a clue what the "the N-word" implies so they read an article saying "the N-word" and dont have a clue which word beginning with N it could be
I disagree, not where I'm from or the places on the Internet I've seen.people say it all the time,
At least that's the same word with a different meaning. "Snigger" is a different word that has nothing to do with black people.shootthebandit said:This is really stupid. Snigger is a genuine word. Its like avoiding referring to a cigarette as a "fag" because americans use the word as a homophobic slur
Me either. I manage to make it through every day without going out of my way to not sound racist but without being accused of racism or any evidence I've offended anyone by racial insensitivity. And considering I'm accused of being part of the SJW crowd, you'd think I'd be tripping all over accusations of racism. It's amazing. Maybe I should submit myself for study.Mossberg Shotty said:Unfortunately we have reached that point. The point where almost anything you say can be misconstrued as vaguely racist. Personally, I don't get it.
I've primarily seen it in books I had to read in school. It was my impression it was an archaic word, but I guess I was wrong. It seems to be more prevalent than I thought.TheYellowCellPhone said:I disagree, not where I'm from or the places on the Internet I've seen.
Dammit! Now, I'm hungry for a Snickers! *takes out a Snickers bar out of his Snickers drawer*Dead Century said:Hey, OP. Maybe you should eat one of these. I think you must get a little British when you're hungry. XD
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These were called Marathon in the UK until 1990. God, I'm getting old.Dead Century said:Hey, OP. Maybe you should eat one of these. I think you must get a little British when you're hungry. XD
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In all seriousness, I have heard snigger before, but most people here in Canada just use snicker.
Where I come from "tapping/bumming a fag" from someone is a slang for asking to borrow a cigarette. Imagine going to america and completely forgetting their use of the word and asking to "tap/bum a fag"Dexterity said:It's pretty funny really, because depending on whether you're American or British, the phrase "Smoke a fag" can either come across as "Go outside and smoke a cigarette" or "Shoot a gay guy".shootthebandit said:This is really stupid. Snigger is a genuine word. Its like avoiding referring to a cigarette as a "fag" because americans use the word as a homophobic slur
Personally I use the phrase a lot, because it's just general slang where I live, but I imagine with no context or anything, it could sound... Well, really weird to someone who doesn't understand foreign slang.
You know I was just thinking exactly of that when I wrote the OP.TheRiddler said:This problem is referred to as the Scunthorpe Problem, after the English town with an unfortunate expletive hidden in its name.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scunthorpe_problem