I just got the point . Good one. now drink some more coffee and get ready to.....well you know
Good idea...more coffee is always needed!
and so I am off to make my 2d cup of the morning
Second cup!
Lightweight!
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I just got the point . Good one. now drink some more coffee and get ready to.....well you know
Good idea...more coffee is always needed!
and so I am off to make my 2d cup of the morning
So if ya get "pissed," does that make you a "tosser" or a "wanker?"No, I'm not angry. I was just thinking about this word. Apart from Dr Grump, Roomy and me and anyone else with a UK/AUS/NZ background, I would reckon most readers would see "pissed"="angry".
Some non UK/AUS/NZers might know that "pissed"= drunk in UK/AUS/NZ.
So, I could be pissed+pissed posting here. Or I could just be pissed.
Or I could get pissed after reading a few posts.
Funny thing though, the synonym for "angry" how passed into Australian casual language. But we tend to say "pissed off" which is, I think, the usual full expression in American. Americans drop the "off" and still understand that it means "angry".
Okay, I'm going to piss off now
An excellent question. If you get pissed and annoy everyone it makes you a wanker. If you annoy everyone without getting pissed it makes you a tosser.
In spite of that, I still say we don't speak 'English' in the USA, we speak 'American'...
Ax any yo posse, y'all... jus' ax 'em.
-Joe
He's on Mountain time.
Cup #4 here in EST.
In spite of that, I still say we don't speak 'English' in the USA, we speak 'American'...
Ax any yo posse, y'all... jus' ax 'em.
-Joe
Aaaahh... I'd say that sounds more like ebonics than American Joe... just sayin'...
I've seen enough people for whom "Instant angry asshole - just add alcohol" is a truism, that I can appreciate the co-connotations of 'pissed' booze and 'pissed' mad...
In spite of that, I still say we don't speak 'English' in the USA, we speak 'American'...
Ax any yo posse, y'all... jus' ax 'em.
-Joe
No, I'm not angry. I was just thinking about this word. Apart from Dr Grump, Roomy and me and anyone else with a UK/AUS/NZ background, I would reckon most readers would see "pissed"="angry".
Some non UK/AUS/NZers might know that "pissed"= drunk in UK/AUS/NZ.
So, I could be pissed+pissed posting here. Or I could just be pissed.
Or I could get pissed after reading a few posts.
Funny thing though, the synonym for "angry" how passed into Australian casual language. But we tend to say "pissed off" which is, I think, the usual full expression in American. Americans drop the "off" and still understand that it means "angry".
Okay, I'm going to piss off now
my favorite british colloquialism is bugger.
Now, bugger off mate!
No, I'm not angry. I was just thinking about this word. Apart from Dr Grump, Roomy and me and anyone else with a UK/AUS/NZ background, I would reckon most readers would see "pissed"="angry".
Some non UK/AUS/NZers might know that "pissed"= drunk in UK/AUS/NZ.
So, I could be pissed+pissed posting here. Or I could just be pissed.
Or I could get pissed after reading a few posts.
Funny thing though, the synonym for "angry" how passed into Australian casual language. But we tend to say "pissed off" which is, I think, the usual full expression in American. Americans drop the "off" and still understand that it means "angry".
Okay, I'm going to piss off now
my favorite british colloquialism is bugger.
Now, bugger off mate!
smeghead!
No, I'm not angry. I was just thinking about this word. Apart from Dr Grump, Roomy and me and anyone else with a UK/AUS/NZ background, I would reckon most readers would see "pissed"="angry".
Some non UK/AUS/NZers might know that "pissed"= drunk in UK/AUS/NZ.
So, I could be pissed+pissed posting here. Or I could just be pissed.
Or I could get pissed after reading a few posts.
Funny thing though, the synonym for "angry" how passed into Australian casual language. But we tend to say "pissed off" which is, I think, the usual full expression in American. Americans drop the "off" and still understand that it means "angry".
Okay, I'm going to piss off now
You're taking the piss, mate.
I've seen enough people for whom "Instant angry asshole - just add alcohol" is a truism, that I can appreciate the co-connotations of 'pissed' booze and 'pissed' mad...
In spite of that, I still say we don't speak 'English' in the USA, we speak 'American'...
Ax any yo posse, y'all... jus' ax 'em.
-Joe
Does anyone else see the irony in this thread?
I don't do irony, it's too subtle.
A thread called "PISSED" written by someone named "Diuretic"...
I guess you have to be in the medical field to find it funny!
I don't do irony, it's too subtle.
A thread called "PISSED" written by someone named "Diuretic"...
I guess you have to be in the medical field to find it funny!
Ha! I didn't even get it myself! Just goes to show, in my own mind the nick has taken on a life of its own and isn't related to the small green bottle my eyes fell on a couple of years ago when I was asked to nominate a nickname....
A thread called "PISSED" written by someone named "Diuretic"...
I guess you have to be in the medical field to find it funny!
Ha! I didn't even get it myself! Just goes to show, in my own mind the nick has taken on a life of its own and isn't related to the small green bottle my eyes fell on a couple of years ago when I was asked to nominate a nickname....
Makes sense...
So I supppose you could have just as easily been called "Laxative" or "Ipecac" or "Douche".