Some thing WICKED this way comes!
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- Lexiterian
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Some thing WICKED this way comes!
I think it is WICKED that fudge ice cream is so WICKED good!
Do you get my point? I have lived in a couple parts of America and "wicked" has manny conotaqtions and meaning.
In Maine, some thing can be "wicked good!"
In Boston, Mass some one can be "wicked!"
And in California, it can be "wicked awesome", but in the valley "wicked" has a few other meanings.
Could you clear this up for me please?
Do you get my point? I have lived in a couple parts of America and "wicked" has manny conotaqtions and meaning.
In Maine, some thing can be "wicked good!"
In Boston, Mass some one can be "wicked!"
And in California, it can be "wicked awesome", but in the valley "wicked" has a few other meanings.
Could you clear this up for me please?
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- Grand Panjandrum
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The use of words originally possessing strongly negative connotations as intensifiers in neutral or positive senses is common not only in English («terribly funny») but also in Swedish as well. Indeed, I have seen proposals, not entirely facetious, from linguists that nouns in Swedish, for example, could be defined as members of the word class that takes «[d]jävla» (adjectival form of «djävul», Eng «devil») as a modifier, adjectives those that take «skit» («s h i t»), and verbs those that take the phrase «ut i helvete» («in Hell», «hellishly». And I remember a small child describing something very hot as «isvarmt» («ice-hot». Now when our cousins the Pan spp can do the same, I'll say they've got language !...
Henri
Henri
Last edited by M. Henri Day on Wed Feb 16, 2005 11:08 am, edited 1 time in total.
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- Grand Panjandrum
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contradictory words
just as baaad became 'good', 'hot' bacame cool, and phat is de bomb!
Katy
Katy
Anders, you are stupid none!
A while back I watched a video clip from The Story of English. It told of a unique playful use of negatives in Tangerine Island, somewhere in New England (spelling uncertain, pronunciation uncertain and location uncertain ). There, "You are ugly none," means that you are very beautiful. If I remember correctly there is a slight pause between "none" and the rest of the sentence.
Everytime I hear WICKED in sense of "great," I can almost visualise a small tag of none at the end of the utterance. Perhaps this is the way it all started?
A while back I watched a video clip from The Story of English. It told of a unique playful use of negatives in Tangerine Island, somewhere in New England (spelling uncertain, pronunciation uncertain and location uncertain ). There, "You are ugly none," means that you are very beautiful. If I remember correctly there is a slight pause between "none" and the rest of the sentence.
Everytime I hear WICKED in sense of "great," I can almost visualise a small tag of none at the end of the utterance. Perhaps this is the way it all started?
One of the latest intensifiers originating from a Japanese negative adjective is yabai (in Levantine Arabic, yaabayi is an exclamation of happy surprise like YAY, btw). Yabai originally meant, and still means for those above 40 years of age, dangerous or strange. Yabai shigoto is a job that is dangerous because it involves some degree of criminality.
Some of the make-ups that younger generations could call yabai keshoo seems really yabai in the original sense to me.
Flam
Some of the make-ups that younger generations could call yabai keshoo seems really yabai in the original sense to me.
Flam
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- Junior Lexiterian
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- Location: Southern PA, USA, Earth, Sol System, Orion Arm, Milky Way Galaxy, The Universe.
According to "Grimoire for the Green Witch" by Anne Moura [Llewelyn Press], the etymological origins of the terms "Witch," "Wicca," and "Wicked" come from the old celtic root "Wycche" meaning "Wise," as the Wicca in the British Isles B.C.E. and for some time C.E. were seen as healers and spiritually divine. The negative connotations of "Wicked" were evolved during the Witch Hunts of the eleventh through seventeenth/eighteenth centuries C.E.
I prefer the term "Bloody" as an intensifier, mainly because of my chronic Anglophilia.
I prefer the term "Bloody" as an intensifier, mainly because of my chronic Anglophilia.
"We are a way for the Cosmos to know itself."
-Carl Sagan
First they ignore you...
Then they laugh at you...
Then they fight you...
Then you win!
-Gandhi
-Carl Sagan
First they ignore you...
Then they laugh at you...
Then they fight you...
Then you win!
-Gandhi
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- Grand Panjandrum
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