Here's one for "the things sure have changed a lot since the Y2K era" file: some of my uni students are casually using both the noun and adjective forms of the c-word as a term of endearment, with is apparently a thing now with the youngers.
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Here's one for "the things sure have changed a lot since the Y2K era" file: some of my uni students are casually using both the noun and adjective forms of the c-word as a term of endearment, with is apparently a thing now with the youngers. I'm not at all a prude, but if you're not British or Australian you should be a careful guardian of the top tier of English profanities. With overuse, it loses all of its power and then what are you going to go to when you really need it?
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Here's one for "the things sure have changed a lot since the Y2K era" file: some of my uni students are casually using both the noun and adjective forms of the c-word as a term of endearment, with is apparently a thing now with the youngers. I'm not at all a prude, but if you're not British or Australian you should be a careful guardian of the top tier of English profanities. With overuse, it loses all of its power and then what are you going to go to when you really need it?
@sendtherunners It’s back to “quim” I suppose for that old time Victorian charm