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Phrases/terms that need to be retired immediately (3 Viewers)

Someone may have mentioned this upthread, but the HackAnnouncerSpecial of genericizing great players. "You've got your Arian Fosters, and your Ray Rices, and your Calvin Johnsons." I actually heard a guy do this on a late-night baseball telecast once with Willie Mays and Hank Aaron.
I'm going to go with "upthread"
:shrug: Earlier in the thread? Previously in the thread?
I know what it means... just think it sounds shticky, so I say "retire" it
I'm going to go with "shticky"
:goodposting:
 
'-jb- said:
My son has taken to calling his farts freddies. Keep or retire?
My dad and his brothers were/are big John Wayne fans so my cousins and I used to refer to our #2 as Duke."I gotta take a Duke.""That was a great Duke."
 
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'-jb- said:
My son has taken to calling his farts freddies. Keep or retire?
My dad and his brothers were/are big John Wayne fans so my cousins and I used to refer to our #2 as Duke."I gotta take a Duke.""That was a great Duke."
Heard this as far back as college, but it has nothing to do with John Wayne. :lmao:
Thanks for ruining my parade. I have a bone to pick with my cousins. :bag:
 
'-jb- said:
My son has taken to calling his farts freddies. Keep or retire?
My dad and his brothers were/are big John Wayne fans so my cousins and I used to refer to our #2 as Duke."I gotta take a Duke.""That was a great Duke."
Heard this as far back as college, but it has nothing to do with John Wayne. :lmao:
Thanks for ruining my parade. I have a bone to pick with my cousins. :bag:
http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=dook
 
'-jb- said:
My son has taken to calling his farts freddies. Keep or retire?
My dad and his brothers were/are big John Wayne fans so my cousins and I used to refer to our #2 as Duke."I gotta take a Duke.""That was a great Duke."
Heard this as far back as college, but it has nothing to do with John Wayne. :lmao:
It goes back farther than that. I'm pretty sure I remember hearing it back in high school ('oh the 1930s?' said the GMTANer).It's probably just a derivative of "doo-doo".
 
Has anyone said "short money" yet. As in "sos, I'ze was talkin' to a guy and he was willin' to sell me his atv for short money."

What strikes me as funny about phrases and terms like these is that they all have to said for the first time by somebody. And they know it's their first time saying it.



Wow, I just heard Brent say "short money" when talking about something. You know what? I like it!

(days pass, finally the opportunity arises to use the phrase)

So, I knew I'd have a tuff time comin' up with the money for the trip but the tickets were...(I'm gonna do it!) you see the tickets were...(it's almost like right before an orgasm!)...were sellin' for SHORT MONEY!

I did it! I'm now one of the people who say SHORT MONEY!!!!!!!!

Now tomorrow I'm going I'm going to introduce my friends to my new fashion statemen. I'm going to wear a winter hat even though the forecast calls for a 90 degree day. And then I'm gonna tell 'em, not that the hat was a good deal, or it was cheap! Oh, no. I'm a SHORT MONEY guy now.

 
"...yes, please!"

i.e.

Facebook status update:

"Krispy Kreme donuts for breakfast...yes, please!"

I want to throat-punch people who say this.

 
"moving day" for the third round of a golf tournament.
A golf course being called a "track".
I will buy this if we can get rid of people calling golf clubs "Sticks"
I would never want to lose "goat track" though. Love that phrase
I prefer goat ranch.
I use "cow pasture". Oh, and you can take away track and sticks when you pry them from my cold dead trachea.
 
"You didn't build that"

Barack O'Dumbo

"I didn't drive the car into the ditch, I am just trying to drive us out"

The Liar in Cheif

 
"<pronoun> <verb> like a rock star," as in "I partied like a rock star." You know who does stuff like rock stars? Rock stars. Not you, your hipster doofus pal or biff from accounting.

There's nothing "rock 'n roll" about selling a dozen shares of Fizzy Cola, stop implying your mundane, meaningless activities are in anyway rocking and rolling.

Finally, there's nothing "cool" about features on a computer/software application/toaster oven/etc. Stop using "cool" to mean interesting, useful or not awful.

 
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The word "Hubby" is used in an alarmingly increasing frequency by women across the land in reference to their husbands.

I don't know why, but it makes me cringe. If my wife called me "hubby" I think I'd leave her.

 
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Someone may have mentioned this upthread, but the HackAnnouncerSpecial of genericizing great players. "You've got your Arian Fosters, and your Ray Rices, and your Calvin Johnsons." I actually heard a guy do this on a late-night baseball telecast once with Willie Mays and Hank Aaron.
I believe it's been mentioned, but it bears repeating. I think the version I hate most is "the Calvin Johnsons of the world."
You've got your shukes, your chets, your Pickleses.
 

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