8 comments

  • thrownawaysz 4 minutes ago

    Interestingly there are some not so good sources

    >F

    >[SE fail, also used as a mark for inadequate work, or fuck!]

    >(juv.) response to someone else’s bad news.

    F doesn't come from fail but from Call of Duty

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Press_F_to_pay_respects

    https://knowyourmeme.com/memes/press-f-to-pay-respects

    • NelsonMinar 6 hours ago

      Economist had a good article recently about how this came to be 15 years ago: https://www.economist.com/interactive/christmas-specials/202...

      Long story short he got lucky in the 90s with an inheritance and a publisher and can now devote his life to researching and publishing English slang. It's also interesting to me because it's a project that started as a book but has now migrated successfully to the Internet, both for publishing the dictionary and for doing research for updates to the dictionary.

      • runamuck 8 hours ago

        Tough guys with Mullets that blasted Metallica said "Mint" (term of approval) every sentence back in 1980's Long Island. I just learned it also meant "a trace of homosexual tendencies" a few decades prior.

        • jmward01 7 hours ago

          I did a lot of text cleaning a while ago and we tried to normalize curse word spelling as part of that. That was, by far, the most interesting text cleaning I have ever done. It is really clear how much innovation in the English language is happening there.

          • gadders 8 hours ago

            I can also recommend Roger's Profanisaurus for a British view of swearwords and vulgar euphemisms: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roger%27s_Profanisaurus

            • mmsc 6 hours ago

              Orwell's Down and Out in Paris and London documented some of the swear words of his time [0].

              It's interesting reading them as a native speaker, as there's so few that I could even begin to guess what they mean.

              [0]: https://www.telelib.com/authors/O/OrwellGeorge/prose/Downand...

              • yread 9 hours ago

                Nice! Brings back memories how we made a list of expressions for "fucking" in Czech. Got to 344 before moving on. It's still online even!

                https://www.pismak.cz/dilo/41683/

              • ilamont 6 hours ago

                I have a copy of Greens printed in the 1990s. It's very extensive and frankly seems like a hopeless exercise to gather them considering how fast language evolves, as well as hyperlocal terms.