Zombies.
So over it.
This thread is starting to give me agida because I'm reminded of the stack of essays I have to grade tomorrow.![]()
Okay, a couple more.
--'could have gone" and NOT "could of went"
--fewer people, NOT less people
And apropos of nothing, I hate the word 'munch.'
Aw man. Come on Tee! Don't take away my amazeballs! I use that quite often!Not a fan of "amazeballs".
Haha, good stuff everyone!
To take this in a professional sports direction, the possibilities are endless ............. 110%, no "I" in team .....
But one I have been hearing a lot lately is "skill set". The player has a good "skill set"? Is it not good enough just to say he/she is talented, good, or an excellent reciever or base runner? Geez
Yeah.
YOLO
Like (used as a noun, verb, adjective, punctuation, filler... If I had a penny for every time I hear this used, could pay off the US deficit before the end of the year)
irrespective
you know? I know, right?
Like, you know? (Heard a 10-minute conversation where 90% of the content was this and the previous set of phrases. Maybe, it just felt "like" 10 minutes.)
Exciting! (when used to describe something as dull as 30-year old paint)
Technology (when used as a blanket phrase to imply superiority, supplants the use of "magic" in the middle ages, but with the same illuminating qualities)
Investment (used by sales-person instead of "cost" which would be much more appropriate)
And what the heck are "amazeballs"? Are they poofy, covered in glitter? Objects to be thrown? A new form of culinary delicacy?
Ohhhhh pgriz......amazeballs is a term I use when something is so amazing that using the term amazing just wouldn't do it justice. Just picture yourself in a fine dining establishment with your wife, and you take a bite of the most amazing crab cakes you have ever tasted in your life. You say to yourself WOW that was amazing.....no wait....that was amazeballs! See the impact that has? Your wife would then say, "I know, right?"Yeah.
YOLO
Like (used as a noun, verb, adjective, punctuation, filler... If I had a penny for every time I hear this used, could pay off the US deficit before the end of the year)
irrespective
you know? I know, right?
Like, you know? (Heard a 10-minute conversation where 90% of the content was this and the previous set of phrases. Maybe, it just felt "like" 10 minutes.)
Exciting! (when used to describe something as dull as 30-year old paint)
Technology (when used as a blanket phrase to imply superiority, supplants the use of "magic" in the middle ages, but with the same illuminating qualities)
Investment (used by sales-person instead of "cost" which would be much more appropriate)
And what the heck are "amazeballs"? Are they poofy, covered in glitter? Objects to be thrown? A new form of culinary delicacy?