The teenage nephews and niece who live in the OC still use "tight" but "hot" is also popular.
Emmett has also used "tight" since he was in first grade. Cali thang.
The word for "lame" in his school's vernacular is "cheap."
A place to talk about movies--old and new, good and bad, high art and high cheese. It's the place to place your kittens on the award winners, gossip about upcoming fims and discuss DVD releases and extras. Spoiler policy: White font all plot-related discussion until a movie's been in wide release two weeks, and keep the major HSQ in white font until two weeks after the video/DVD release.
The teenage nephews and niece who live in the OC still use "tight" but "hot" is also popular.
Emmett has also used "tight" since he was in first grade. Cali thang.
The word for "lame" in his school's vernacular is "cheap."
I've also heard "tits" as an adjective.
I think it goes back to George Carlin.
I think it goes back to George Carlin.
I've heard his bit where he talks about them sounding like a snack food, but I don't recall anything where he used it as anything but a noun.
I've heard his bit where he talks about them sounding like a snack food, but I don't recall anything where he used it as anything but a noun.
Heh. Bet you can't eat just one.
I loathe the upsurge of "hot," if only because it makes me think of that waste of space, Paris Hilton.
But it's still acceptable to describe a hot guy or gal as such.
Last month, my junior-high-teaching SIL told me that she was just horrified that the kids at her school are using "gay" to mean lame. I replied that that was common back when I was that age, and, when John Wayne Gacy's serial killings was discovered at Christmas of 8th grade, the phrase went from "Oh, you're so gay" to "Oh, you're such a Gacy." Of course, I don't think that many of us really knew what being gay actually meant--we'd picked up the word in the media but were vague on the details.
Last month, my junior-high-teaching SIL told me that she was just horrified that the kids at her school are using "gay" to mean lame. I replied that that was common back when I was that age, and, when John Wayne Gacy's serial killings was discovered at Christmas of 8th grade, the phrase went from "Oh, you're so gay" to "Oh, you're such a Gacy." Of course, I don't think that many of us really knew what being gay actually meant--we'd picked up the word in the media but were vague on the details.
There was a discussion somewhere here recently (natter maybe) about childhood games, and I mentioned we used to play a game called "smear the queer" when we were kids (aka "kill the guy with the ball"). I think use of the phrase "gay" in the above context came up as well.
There was a discussion somewhere here recently (natter maybe) about childhood games, and I mentioned we used to play a game called "smear the queer" when we were kids (aka "kill the guy with the ball"). I think use of the phrase "gay" in the above context came up as well.
We played the same game as a kid and had no idea what "queer" actually meant.
My first introduction into the use of gay=lame was again the internet and on-line video games. I have a couple friends who use it IRL and think I'm being overly sensitive when I object to it.
I realise why I can't parse "tits" as positive -- I keep thinking of "tits up."
I realise why I can't parse "tits" as positive -- I keep thinking of "tits up."
On the other hand, if you give a movie two tits up, is that a good or a bad?