Guffalo Posted December 5, 2012 Posted December 5, 2012 "Is it in?" "Is that it?" "Are you done?" Obviously I am talking about the time honored tradition of doing the Christmas cards......
Richmond_Bills Posted December 5, 2012 Posted December 5, 2012 "Get off of me you pig" Seriously though: grrrrrr - I have a friend that I talk to and whenever he describes something that frustrates him he uses "grrrr" at the end of the sentence Winning - taken from Charlie Sheen I'll second the "meh" and the "#"....annoys me to no end.
NWPABillsfan Posted December 5, 2012 Posted December 5, 2012 "Just saying" "And what not" These both drive me up a wall. When someone say these I can't hear anything they say after that. Just BAH BAH BAH after some one says these.
UConn James Posted December 5, 2012 Posted December 5, 2012 "Zeitgeist" "Pastiche" "Hot for ..." "Let me be clear ..." When people use the word "Look, ..." as an exclamation at the start of a sentence. They may not mean it, but there's something inherently hostile in it. Like, 'Look! Here. Right here! You're not seeing it. The answer is HERE. I'm right and you're wrong. Look!' I had a prof who used that a lot, in just such an accusatory way, even on matters of personal opinion/belief. Always pi--ed me right off.
HereComesTheReignAgain Posted December 5, 2012 Posted December 5, 2012 "I could care less" The correct phrase is "I couldn't care less". If you could care less, then you obviously care about whatever you are talking about. "LOL". why do some people have to incorporate that into every god damn text that they write?
BuffOrange Posted December 5, 2012 Posted December 5, 2012 Must say I'm guilty of "just sayin". One of our managers runs it into the ground though. Plus "TGI_" where _ = whatever day it is. You can imagine how lame that sounds. I have to nominate "sick". Not totally sure if this is constricted to the poker world still or if it's made it's way into the mainstream, but I always want to punch somebody in the face when they say this. Yes it's "so sick" that your overpair didn't hold up (often needing to dodge half the deck). Make sure to tell everyone how unlucky you are. Meanwhile the same thing likely happened to me within the last 1/2 hour and I didn't say a word.
Maury Ballstein Posted December 5, 2012 Posted December 5, 2012 Must say I'm guilty of "just sayin". One of our managers runs it into the ground though. Plus "TGI_" where _ = whatever day it is. You can imagine how lame that sounds. I have to nominate "sick". Not totally sure if this is constricted to the poker world still or if it's made it's way into the mainstream, but I always want to punch somebody in the face when they say this. Yes it's "so sick" that your overpair didn't hold up (often needing to dodge half the deck). Make sure to tell everyone how unlucky you are. Meanwhile the same thing likely happened to me within the last 1/2 hour and I didn't say a word. gotta say the whole poker lingo in general could be added here................"thats so sick" leads me to say maybe you should bet the turn! haaaaaa
Fan in San Diego Posted December 6, 2012 Posted December 6, 2012 Republicans PC Sorry I didn't mean to ... In a perfect world Six of one half dozen of another That's in my wheel house
CowgirlsFan Posted December 6, 2012 Posted December 6, 2012 Starting a sentence with the word ...so !!
bbb Posted December 6, 2012 Posted December 6, 2012 Because you paid her, and that's what she's supposed to say. I have to start paying for higher class hookers. Not the better looking ones, but the ones who know the correct tenses of the English language!
Beerball Posted December 6, 2012 Posted December 6, 2012 "I could care less" The correct phrase is "I couldn't care less". If you could care less, then you obviously care about whatever you are talking about. "LOL". why do some people have to incorporate that into every god damn text that they write? LOL, I have no idea, but I could care less.
Fezmid Posted December 6, 2012 Posted December 6, 2012 I have to start paying for higher class hookers. Not the better looking ones, but the ones who know the correct tenses of the English language!
Britbillsfan Posted December 6, 2012 Posted December 6, 2012 "I could care less" The correct phrase is "I couldn't care less". If you could care less, then you obviously care about whatever you are talking about. "LOL". why do some people have to incorporate that into every god damn text that they write? Good call. It is utterly meaningless...
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