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  • american english - Distribution of slang term “opp” - English Language . . .
    One slang term which is used by young people in my community rather often is “opp ” It is clearly derived from the stem “oppose,” and is basically short for opposition or opponent
  • Does OP mean “original poster” or “original post”?
    However, others mean "OP" abstractly as " the original source of the content " They're not actually referring to either the post or the poster specifically, so we can't say that their usage of "OP" maps to one over the other The distinction between this abstraction and ambiguity is the presence-or-absence of referential transparency
  • abbreviations - What does O. G. stand for? - English Language Usage . . .
    Currently reading "Slang for the ages It's swag bae," by Kory Stamper from International New York Times (October 6, 2014), I came across this acronym O G "It[swag]'s generally taken to be a
  • etymology - Origin of Its a fair cop - English Language Usage . . .
    4 From: The Concise New Partridge Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English it’s a fair cop used of a good or legal arrest; in later use, as a jocular admission of anything trivial UK, 1891 and an arrest UK, 1844 Especially familiar in the phrase IT’S A FAIR COP Above are a couple of citations showing early use of the phrase, without
  • Is there a phrase for someone whos really bad at cooking? - slang
    I'm looking for a phrase that describes someone who's really bad at cooking, similar to 'green fingers' for someone who's good at gardening There doesn't seem to be any such phrase from a Google s
  • What does “bupkes” mean? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    This definition also confirms that the singular form, bubke (which was in the OP's question before editing), isn't used in English, as it is in Yiddish according to David Gold's answer here According to a Google Ngram, the spelling bubkes is more frequent than that of the OED's headword choice, bubkis: Earlier evidence Google Books now shows:
  • Is there a more informal or slang alternative to couple for two . . .
    There are lots of slang terms for a romantic couple, or for the state of being in such a couple, or for the actions that make up being in one “They’re an item,” yes, absolutely, that’s something people say of the two people in a couple
  • Origin of the expression to be gagging to do something
    The slang expression appears to be from early 90’s and is also used for sexual desire: Gagging for (also gagging to) [SE gag, to choke]: want desperate for to 1994 [Ire] J O’Connor Secret World of the Irish Male (1995) 74: I [ ] was gagging for another bottle of Moroccan Beaujolais
  • What is the origin of the idiom To Stand Someone Up?
    Alternatively, a contemporaneous meaning of standup is robbery in a public place, what in more recent slang we would refer to as a mugging (or stickup, unrelated, from the robber's order to stick your hands up) The abandoned date doesn't suffer anything so violent, of course, but they are robbed of dignity in a public place
  • expressions - Is aka used in some instances to mean meaning more . . .
    @WritingShort Because slang is not a count noun, you cannot have “ a slang“ or in fact “any slangs” at all I suppose that maybe, just maybe, when comparing, say, street slang versus shop slang, you be said to be comparing different “ slangs”, but that would mean two different collections of slang expressions, as unusual as comparing two different “rices” would be Normally we





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