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McJob is finally recognised - Draconis - 11-09-2003

Websters dictionary has recognised the word "McJob" to mean "low-paying and dead-end work".

What a crack up :)


McJob is finally recognised - [wcip]Angel - 11-09-2003

Time to update my electronic dictionary, I guess.

Let's see what Oxford has to say about this.

"No need to update." I guess the British don't share your opinion.. ;)


McJob is finally recognised - WarLocke - 11-10-2003

No!

The cockroaches have competed yet another phase of their plan for world domination! Once they totally lobotomize the human race, they'll hit the Big Red Button themselves and have the world to do with as they please!

...

McJob? Makes me ashamed to be human. :angry:


McJob is finally recognised - Rhydderch Hael - 11-10-2003

You speak as if one endeavouring the maintain the purity of the English language. The trouble is, the English language is as pure as an Aldgate whore, picking up every little bit of this and that from any other language that passes her fancy, anything that is the vogue (the word vogue, for instance) of the moment. She even makes stuff up from a mish-mash of fractured words, vestigial terms, gibberish (like the words "mish-mash" and "gibberish") and good ol' jargon or acronyms.


McJob is finally recognised - WarLocke - 11-10-2003

... So you don't mind that McJob is now an 'official' word?

There's quite a difference between 'adopting' a foreign word like vogue into the English language (one that has an actual use and definition), but McJob? C'mon now...


McJob is finally recognised - [wcip]Angel - 11-10-2003

http://www.home.no/lzp/emoticon.wav


McJob is finally recognised - Archon_Wing - 11-10-2003

What the... (The forum won't let me type this)?

That's just plain mean. -_- Although slightly funny.


McJob is finally recognised - TaMeOlta - 11-10-2003

... thats McFunny ;)


McJob is finally recognised - Occhidiangela - 11-10-2003

A well endowed German call girl who likes all of those foreign fashions. So, what's not to like? :D She gets around, all right, and funnily enough, is a world traveler.

Live large, while you can, look at what happened to Latin!


McJob is finally recognised - Rhydderch Hael - 11-10-2003

Well, gee golly and gadzooks! That sure as in gosh-darned heck done freaked me out, dude! Let me finagle this lil' blurb of info into my noggin'. But meanwhile...

"Bazooka" was a psuedo-Yiddish bit of nomenclature for a vaudeville musical instrument. Not anymore, buddy.

"Gothic" was a disparaging term that a person of a Reniassance mind labeled to those regions and localities that remained more or less medieval, the term itself making reference to the tribe of Goths that had nothing to do with the architectural and societal lines in which they describe.

A "snafu" was born out of an acronym. So was "radar", "sonar", and "laser".

Don't like "centimetric radar"? Try "microwave" instead.

A "homer", is it a baseball term, or a diminuation of "homing-capable"?

Automobile. Or is it "autonomously mobile carriage"? Hamburger. Or is it a "Hamburg steak sandwich"?

"Bah. Humbug." a refrain from a fictional character that attains immortality in its use as an exclamation as well as meaning "nonsense".

"McJob", aside from the potentially mistaken perspective that it is derogatory to the Irish, is no more an affront to the English language than any of the other past assaults.




As one can deign, thou speaks in the tongue of the English, but in a passing of manner most strange to mine ears.


McJob is finally recognised - Obi2Kenobi - 11-27-2003

They also added comb-over and a few other odd words.


McJob is finally recognised - --Pete - 11-27-2003

Hi,

Live large, while you can, look at what happened to Latin!

Not to mention French, Spanish, and a large part of English?

Languages, like people, live on in their descendants. Although English seems to have no legitimate offspring (much like the Norman French house of Anjou), its bastards look to be taking over the world.

--Pete


McJob is finally recognised - Bob - 11-27-2003

Quote:A "homer", is it a baseball term, or a diminuation of "homing-capable"?

I think you mean "to suceed despite idiocy". Good grief! does no-one watch the simpsons these days?

-Bob


McJob is finally recognised - Kartoffelsalat - 11-27-2003

Quote:Good grief! does no-one watch the simpsons these days?

I can assure you that they do. IIRC, a couple years back, American Heritage Dictionary added "d'oh"