rooshvforum.network is a fully functional forum: you can search, register, post new threads etc...
Old accounts are inaccessible: register a new one, or recover it when possible. x


Common Phrases and Their Real Meaning
#1

Common Phrases and Their Real Meaning

I think we should make a list of commonly used phrases in the media and what they really mean. A lot of these are tricks to make things more palatable to the general public:
  • Undocumented Immigrant = Illegal immigrant
  • Pro-Choice = Pro Abortion
  • Happy Holidays = I'm too much of a pussy to say Happy Christmas. Non-Christians are NOT offended by Happy Christmas
  • Plant Based = Vegetarian/Vegan. I'm sure that a lot of you guys have seen the push for vegetarianism over meat eating. A lot of people don't like what's associated with vegan
  • Climate Change = Global Warming
  • Marriage Equality = Gay Marriage.
  • Partner = I'm too much of a pussy to say boyfriend/girlfriend.
Reply
#2

Common Phrases and Their Real Meaning

Quote: (03-03-2019 08:12 PM)WalterBlack Wrote:  

I think we should make a list of commonly used phrases in the media and what they really mean. A lot of these are tricks to make things more palatable to the general public:
  • Undocumented Immigrant = Illegal immigrant
  • Pro-Choice = Pro Abortion
  • Happy Holidays = I'm too much of a pussy to say Happy Christmas. Non-Christians are NOT offended by Happy Christmas
  • Plant Based = Vegetarian/Vegan. I'm sure that a lot of you guys have seen the push for vegetarianism over meat eating. A lot of people don't like what's associated with vegan
  • Climate Change = Global Warming
  • Marriage Equality = Gay Marriage.
  • Partner = I'm too much of a pussy to say boyfriend/girlfriend.

Good idea for a thread.

Re: the bolded. It should read:

Quote:Quote:

Undocumented Immigrant = Illegal Alien

That's what we called these refugees back in the 90's.

Aliens are a foreign nationals who aren't US citizens. An immigrant is an alien who has been granted the right to work and live in the US. These people don't have the lawful right to work here so they're not immigrants.

These are actual definitions from the government.

Quote: (08-18-2016 12:05 PM)dicknixon72 Wrote:  
...and nothing quite surprises me anymore. If I looked out my showroom window and saw a fully-nude woman force-fucking an alligator with a strap-on while snorting xanex on the roof of her rental car with her three children locked inside with the windows rolled up, I wouldn't be entirely amazed.
Reply
#3

Common Phrases and Their Real Meaning

Quote: (03-03-2019 08:12 PM)WalterBlack Wrote:  

...
[*]Happy Holidays = I'm too much of a pussy to say Happy Christmas. Non-Christians are NOT offended by Happy Christmas
...

I could say that X-Mas is far more pagan in origin than Christian, yet I digress...
Reply
#4

Common Phrases and Their Real Meaning

They don't know whether to shit or go blind = liberals when they eat their own kind.

“There is no global anthem, no global currency, no certificate of global citizenship. We pledge allegiance to one flag, and that flag is the American flag!” -DJT
Reply
#5

Common Phrases and Their Real Meaning

Quote: (03-03-2019 09:53 PM)CynicalContrarian Wrote:  

Quote: (03-03-2019 08:12 PM)WalterBlack Wrote:  

...
[*]Happy Holidays = I'm too much of a pussy to say Happy Christmas. Non-Christians are NOT offended by Happy Christmas
...

I could say that X-Mas is far more pagan in origin than Christian, yet I digress...

Actually,

"Xmas, and variants such as Xtemass, originated as handwriting abbreviations for the typical pronunciation /ˈkrɪsməs/. The "X" comes from the Greek letter Chi, which is the first letter of the Greek word Christós (Χριστός), which became Christ in English"

"The Oxford English Dictionary (OED) and the OED Supplement have cited usages of "X-" or "Xp-" for "Christ-" as early as 1485. The terms "Xtian" and less commonly "Xpian" have also been used for "Christian". The OED further cites usage of "Xtianity" for "Christianity" from 1634.[1] According to Merriam-Webster's Dictionary of English Usage, most of the evidence for these words comes from "educated Englishmen who knew their Greek""

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xmas
Reply
#6

Common Phrases and Their Real Meaning

Blood is thicker than water
>> normally understood to mean that family is the most important
>> actual meaning blood of Christ (belief) is greater than water of the wound (Family ties)

“Where the danger is, so grows the saving element.” ~ German poet Hoelderlin
Reply
#7

Common Phrases and Their Real Meaning

I meant the pine trees, reindeer, mistle-toe & all the other non-Biblical elements. Not to mention the timing.
Reply
#8

Common Phrases and Their Real Meaning

Military intervention = illegal war. "Intervention" softens the blow and makes it sound like we are doing something good.

anti-semitic tropes = someone somewhere said something remotely negative about Jews. He is then accused of engaging in these "tropes". That word has been popping up all over the MSM ever since the Ilhan Omar thing.

we are committed to promoting diversity = fuck off whitey

far-right/ultra-right/populist = any party or individual with conservative political views or slightly to the right of the mainstream.

hatred/hate group = organized goyim
Reply
#9

Common Phrases and Their Real Meaning






George Carlin knew this 30 years ago.
Reply
#10

Common Phrases and Their Real Meaning

Farm to Table = From Costco

Aloha!
Reply
#11

Common Phrases and Their Real Meaning

Trust me = Let me fuck you over.

05-23-2019, 11:15 AM - The moment the Roosh Forum died.
Reply
#12

Common Phrases and Their Real Meaning

We are not having sex I just met you = we are having sex and I just met you
Reply
#13

Common Phrases and Their Real Meaning

  • Kiwis are friendly and welcoming = I heard this phrase before and I think it sounds cool and rolls off the tongue
  • This'll be the best night of our life! = I'll try to think as positively as I can about this night
  • This'll be the best night of our life!(degenerate) = This'll not be the best night of our life
  • Let's make this party something we'll never forget!(degenerate) = Let's make this party something we'll never remember
  • [any phrase praising democracy] = I don't know what I'm talking about
  • [any phrase slamming racism] = I don't have good enough judgment to differentiate between races
  • Your parents deep down, love you no matter what(in particular if they don't know your parents) = I like asserting things that I don't know for certain whether they're true or not
  • The grass is always greener = I don't know when the grass is greener and I imagine others don't either
  • You're just jealous = I cannot imagine a scenario where people criticise or have a negative view of someone or want to call out a fraud/scammer without them being envious. Oh and I am just begging for JJRoberts to correct me.
  • Be more positive!(some instances) = If you say things in a way I don't like, my brain feels like it would melt, and it would be your fault even though there might not be any way you could know that since I never explicitly said so!
Reply
#14

Common Phrases and Their Real Meaning

Old school version of this thread is Ambrose Bierce's Devil's Dictionary:

DEBT, n. An ingenious substitute for the chain and whip of the slave-driver.

JUSTICE, n. A commodity which in a more or less adulterated condition the State sells to the citizen as a reward for his allegiance, taxes and personal service.

LAWYER, n. One skilled in circumvention of the law.

POLITICS, n. A strife of interests masquerading as a contest of principles. The conduct of public affairs for private advantage.

PRESIDENT, n. The leading figure in a small group of men of whom — and of whom only — it is positively known that immense numbers of their countrymen did not want any of them for President.

PROPERTY, n. Any material thing, having no particular value, that may be held by A against the cupidity of B. Whatever gratifies the passion for possession in one and disappoints it in all others. The object of man's brief rapacity and long indifference.


And one or two of my own:

Inappropriate, adj. A word used to render a topic or fact forbidden, used by those who lack the power, means, or immediate opportunity to punch your teeth in. e.g. "That's inappropriate". Also see: CENSORSHIP.

Walk of Shame, n. Phrase given to describe a five second duration in a slut's life where, despite having emancipation and the opportunity and supposedly the belief that they can have free love and sex whenever they like without guilt, said slut feels cringing embarrassment and the sensation of being revealed for what they are to another person. Also see: NARCISSISTIC INJURY

Narcissism: Default operating system of most of the occupants (as opposed to owners) of Western civilisation.

Baby Boomer: Member of the generation that had children and then guaranteed the right to all following generations to murder theirs in utero, as well as use up said children's inheritances.

Remissas, discite, vivet.
God save us from people who mean well. -storm
Reply
#15

Common Phrases and Their Real Meaning

Trending : quite possibly, manipulated nonsense from fake news 'tards & the like.
Reply
#16

Common Phrases and Their Real Meaning

Racist: (Also see: ANTI-SEMITE, NAZI, etc.)
(1) archaic usage: one who believed in the supremacy and superiority of one skin colour over all others.
(2) modern usage: anyone who notices that certain ethnicities occupy jail cells, failed states, universities, banking institutions, and finance circles in statistically outsize percentages, and asks why.

Green: Red in more expensive clothes.

The process is the punishment: Bureaucratic processes particularly in the justice system are so expensive, lengthy, and stressful that the process of obtaining justice is freuqently far more injurious than either the act of delivering justice or ultimately denying it. See also: CHILD SUPPORT PROCEEDING, CONGRESSIONAL INVESTIGATION

Socialism: The belief that a tiger with only half its teeth is a different and far less dangerous thing than the fully-dentured version.

Quantitative Easing: More complex and larger-scale version of government counterfeiting.

Counterfeiting: The act of printing money and indirectly destroying said money's value, rendered legal when the government does it.

Ms.: A single woman below the age of 40 who does not want to be fucked.

Nigger: Contextual word provoking offence inversely proportional to the speaker's lack of melanin.

Remissas, discite, vivet.
God save us from people who mean well. -storm
Reply
#17

Common Phrases and Their Real Meaning

History = coming from Torah (less obvious in English but absolutely obvious in Russian - История)

Experts = propagandists

Scientists = poor nerds who get paid by the wealthy to build new control mechanisms

Brave = a shameless person who will pretend to be a victim or exaggerate their suffering for attention and material gain

Gay = homosexual

Bigot = a person with good ability to notice patterns

Strong = unjustly held by state as more equal then others

Nazi = a white person with self respect

Family = a word without any meaning since it started to include single mothers and homosexual pairings.

Equality = equality of outcome

Freedom = access to abortion

Safety = dependency on government

Safe space = space where you have to walk on eggshells

Harassment = a behavior that is too benign to be called violence and therefore shouldn't be prosecuted unless committed by white men

Abuse = a behavior that is too benign to be called violence and therefore shouldn't be prosecuted unless committed by white men

News = fake news

Fake news = news

Holy = Islamic

Pride = a stinking shame

Rights = entitlements

Women's education = birth control

Free = taxpayer funded
Reply
#18

Common Phrases and Their Real Meaning

We think this is a great opportunity for you / You can really prove yourself here = Work harder slave! for the same amount of money and we'll end up promoting the CEO's nephew
Reply
#19

Common Phrases and Their Real Meaning

Walk of Shame=. The morning after a young slut gets fucked and walks back to her dorm or apartment while wearing the clothes from the night before
Reply
#20

Common Phrases and Their Real Meaning

Living my best life = I'm bipolar and just as depressed as you, but here's a photo of me indulging in some cliche superficiality to hopefully make you think I'm doing better than you.
Reply
#21

Common Phrases and Their Real Meaning

When "youth," "teens," "assailants," "suspects," etc are the subject of a criminal news story, it means they're black. When whitey commits a crime, his skin color will be reported on hastily.
Reply
#22

Common Phrases and Their Real Meaning

In the UK;

In the rare times it makes the media, 'Grooming Gangs' (sometimes, but less commonly referred to as 'Asian' Grooming Gangs' = Predominantly Pakistani rape gangs who target underage white working class girls.

‘After you’ve got two eye-witness accounts, following an automobile accident, you begin
To worry about history’ – Tim Allen
Reply
#23

Common Phrases and Their Real Meaning

Toxic Masculinity = a man working to develop his innate masculine traits

Sexist/Racist/Radical/Alt-Right = a person that abhors group think, conformity and collectivism

Celebrity/Empowered = a person that experiences the world through a post-modernist lens, has conformed to the established collectivist paradigms on standards of thought, behavior and belief, and vilifies anyone that does not live as they do

two scoops
two genders
two terms
Reply
#24

Common Phrases and Their Real Meaning

“You’ve got the biggest cock I’ve ever seen!”= I’ve seen a lot of dick and yours will do

“I’m on my period so we can’t have sex today”=. We can fuck but you need to coax me into it.
Reply
#25

Common Phrases and Their Real Meaning

Quote: (03-04-2019 04:14 AM)Monkey Business Wrote:  

When "youth," "teens," "assailants," "suspects," etc are the subject of a criminal news story, it means they're black. When whitey commits a crime, his skin color will be reported on hastily.

The UK has a twist on this - when minorities are involved, all news stories will be in passive language, ie "Girl, 13, raped in park", "Parents mourn their beautiful murdered daughter" etc.
All about playing up sympathy for the victim and hitting the emotional buttons, but no mention of the attacker or any identifying features.
Reply


Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)