Saffron: You won't tell anyone about me breaking down? Mal: I won't. Saffron: Then I won't tell anyone how easily I got your gun out of your holster. Mal: I'll take that as a kindness.

'Trash'


Bureaucracy 2: Like Sartre, Only Longer  

A thread to discuss naming threads, board policy, new thread suggestions, and anything else that has to do with board administration and maintenance. Guaranteed to include lively debate and polls. Natter discouraged, but not deleted.

Current Stompy Feet: ita, Jon B, DXMachina, P.M. Marcontell, Liese S., amych


JenP - Feb 24, 2004 2:28:00 pm PST #6829 of 10005

Well, in the context of Quotables it means a quote has been robbed of its rightful OTQ status ... got spazzed.

x-post


§ ita § - Feb 24, 2004 2:29:34 pm PST #6830 of 10005
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Ah. I was just going with short for "spastic." Which ain't so pretty, sans context (and even then ....)


Wolfram - Feb 24, 2004 3:49:47 pm PST #6831 of 10005
Visilurking

I really like spaz in the context, but even dictionary.com labels it as "Offensive Slang" (as opposed to just Slang.) So I got to vote against it.


Jesse - Feb 24, 2004 3:53:38 pm PST #6832 of 10005
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

how about more quote context? Like, "Summers still drives like a spaz" or something. Or, more obscurely, "Istanbul got spazzed!"


sj - Feb 24, 2004 3:54:37 pm PST #6833 of 10005
"There are few hours in life more agreeable than the hour dedicated to the ceremony known as afternoon tea."

"Istanbul got spazzed!"

I like this.


JenP - Feb 24, 2004 4:02:45 pm PST #6834 of 10005

"Istanbul got spazzed!"

Love that.

ETA: I did go to dictionary.com after reading Wolfram's post to enter a bunch of other words that I thought were more or less on the same level of insult, but nary a one of them except for spaz got the offensive slang callout. So, I guess I learned something today.


Betsy HP - Feb 24, 2004 4:31:04 pm PST #6835 of 10005
If I only had a brain...

spaz is offensive because it's short of "spastic", which is a kind of cerebral palsy. I have no idea if it has yet been adopted as affirmative slang in the way that "dyke" has.


RobertH - Feb 24, 2004 7:07:53 pm PST #6836 of 10005
Disaffected college student

While I have no opinion one way or the other on its use in a thread title, I have trouble imagining most of the people who use it today even being aware of its etymology.


bon bon - Feb 24, 2004 7:25:42 pm PST #6837 of 10005
It's five thousand for kissing, ten thousand for snuggling... End of list.

I can't believe the Buffistas would take the word of a quasi authority on a linguistic matter. AT LEAST forty people need to weigh in first.

All snark aside, seems like spaz is no worse than "dumb". After all, all pejorative words have negative etymologies. We have any actual empirical evidence of offense? I wouldn't have connected spastic to CP without explicit help.


§ ita § - Feb 24, 2004 7:33:47 pm PST #6838 of 10005
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

I wouldn't have connected spastic to CP without explicit help.

On the flip side, I had no idea so few knew.

When it was tossed around in high school, everyone knew. So it's not as distant as "moron" for me. More like "retard." Worse, perhaps.