I love Variety speak!
Particularly when prexies ankle.
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risqué (and frisqué), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
I love Variety speak!
Particularly when prexies ankle.
How is "ankle" as a verb playful? My mother resents a lot of computer speak because she thinks there's a perfectly "normal" way to say it. I am often her when it comes to Variety, and often her when it comes to business. Why can't we speak "about" something? Why do we have to speak "to" it?
Why can't we speak "about" something? Why do we have to speak "to" it?
Boy, I LOATHE "speak to," unless it is the usage that means "having a conversation with."
Particularly when prexies ankle.
I have no idea what this means.
How is "ankle" as a verb playful?
Through the power of synechdoche.
Wait, what? How is "ankle" even a verb?
Best use of "monetize " evah?
Eugene Mirman Asks Pressing Questions For CNN/YouTube Climate Change Debate (VIDEO)
Mirman went beyond asking questions and even offered creative suggestions, like, "Maybe what we should do is figure out a way to monetize the amount of times people are called 'fag' in comments on YouTube, and then we use that money to stop global warming."
Variety speak doesn't bother as long as it's in Variety. Business speak bugs because it oozes out into everyday conversation that was getting along fine without it.
How is "ankle" as a verb playful?
Through the power of synechdoche
I'd accuse you of showing off, but you spelt synecdoche wrong.
Wait, what? How is "ankle" even a verb?
Ankle: a classic (and enduring) Variety term meaning to quit or be dismissed from a job, without necessarily specifying which; instead, it suggests walking; "Alan Smithee has ankled his post as production prexy at U."
Variety slanguage. They coined the phrase "sex appeal." I also like "skein" to refer to a series--as it works off a yarn being a story. [link]
And ankle is playful because it's a made up term which compresses "walk away from" into one unexpected but apt word.