| Jan 9, 2007 @ 1:43 AM |
So. |
|
Solitaryguitar

Posts: 41
|
Awhile ago a certain woman sincerely offended my heart.
Today, she asks me if she has the word "Slut" Tattoed on her forehead.
I tell her, "I dun know, did you check the Mirror?"
I then proceeded to abit and go home ^_^
|
|
 |
|
| Jan 9, 2007 @ 2:29 AM |
So. |
|
null_geodesic

Posts: 684
|
You did it with class.
|
 |
|
| Jan 9, 2007 @ 11:21 AM |
So. |
|
emperorguy

Posts: 393
|
ya coulda slipped her a Mickey & wrote it with indelible Sharpie.......
|
|
 |
|
| Jan 9, 2007 @ 10:46 PM |
So. |
|
null_geodesic

Posts: 684
|
Do they make scarlet sharpies?
I don't suppose her name is Hester?
|
 |
|
| Jan 10, 2007 @ 11:04 AM |
So. |
|
emperorguy

Posts: 393
|
scarlet sharpies only write letter A
|
|
 |
|
| Jan 10, 2007 @ 6:23 PM |
So. |
|
eastham

Posts: 7,907
|
A pox upon this woman...and if she keeps up with her lacivious behavior, she may very well contract the pox.
|
 |
|
| Jan 11, 2007 @ 9:13 PM |
So. |
|
zendivamom

Posts: 212
|
What exactly is a Mickey, Emp? Where I'm from...a Mickey is a small bottle of Malt Liquor. Seriously...they look like teeny tiny barrels made of green glass...very tasty too, I might add. I'm assuming a Mickey here is some sort of drug...but what kind of drug is it? I could google it...but I'm assuming your answer will be much more interesting.
|
|
 |
|
| Jan 11, 2007 @ 11:50 PM |
So. |
|
null_geodesic

Posts: 684
|
Yeah, we have Mickeys here too. Can't stand the things -- I draw the line at Zima, and refuse to go any further (it's been a long time since I've had a Zima too). Little squat bottles with a wide neck, IIRC.
A mickey? LOL! Renders the recipient semi-conscious. Sometimes ingested on dates without the person's knowledge (I feel bad for even saying it!)
|
 |
|
| Jan 12, 2007 @ 2:19 AM |
So. |
|
emperorguy

Posts: 393
|
Null'spartially right-- comes from a Mickey Finn-- back in the bad old Barbary Coast days of San Fran, sailors would be waylaid, drugged by substances slipped into their drinks (chloral hydrate was most common) and then awake to find them selves shanghaied-- sworn as crew on ships bound over the pacific rim--
|
|
 |
|
| Jan 12, 2007 @ 4:15 PM |
So. |
|
zendivamom

Posts: 212
|
Sorry for the double post there guys...guess I hit the button twice.
Guitar...was this the wench who ditched you on Halloween to get laid? If so...she probably does have slut tattooed somewhere. If it was on her head...might make life easier for all involved with her!
That's interesting about Mickey Finn, Emp. I wonder why they started using it on women. Sailors generally pay to get laid, I thought. LOL! Anyway...Mickey Finn sounds like some sort of Pirate story!
Can't stand Zima...but little Mickeys remind me of my younger days although I haven't actually had one in years. Probably wouldn't care for it now with the palate I've since developed. I can't even stand the smell of Twinkies and I ate one everyday as a kid. All those preservatives...I'm gonna live forever.
|
 |
|
| Jan 22, 2007 @ 5:50 PM |
So. |
|
Solitaryguitar

Posts: 41
|
Jah, twas the same chick.
|
|
 |
|
| Jan 22, 2007 @ 6:10 PM |
So. |
|
eastham

Posts: 7,907
|
Maybe you shouldn't kiss with your eyes closed all the way, all the time. You can secretly look for those nasty tatoos.
|
 |
|
| Jan 23, 2007 @ 1:59 PM |
So. |
|
zendivamom

Posts: 212
|
I feel sorta bad using that word, Slut. Perhaps she just has some unresolved issues that are affecting her ability to be in a healthy, intimate relationship.
I'm so diplomatic I make myself wanna vomit.
|
|
 |
|
| Jan 24, 2007 @ 1:09 AM |
So. |
|
JohnnyPopper

Posts: 131
|
A Mickey Finn
Meaning
A sedative (or sometimes in the US a purgative) drug surreptitiously slipped into someone's drink.
Origin
A 'Mickey Finn', which is sometimes called just a 'Mickey' is supposed to be named after a character from 19th century Chicago - 'Mickey Finn', of course. Finn was the keeper of Chicago's Lone Star Saloon in the late 19th and early 20th century. He was alleged to have drugged and robbed his customers. There are a couple of US newspaper references from December 1903 that allude to this:
Chicago Daily News - "The complete defense advanced by 'Mickey' Finn, proprietor of the Lone Star saloon ... described ... as the scene of blood-curdling crimes through the agency of drugged liquor."
Inter-Ocean (Chicago) - "Lone Star Saloon loses its license. 'Mickey' Finn's alleged 'knock-out drops' ... put him out of business."
Mickey Finn would have been a common enough name in Ireland and amongst Irish emigres to the USA. Ernest Jarrold was an author in late 19th century USA who wrote a popular series of newspaper stories called the Mickey Finn stories, from the early 1880s onward. The main character was a small boy and the stories are in the same vein as Twain's Huckleberry Finn (pub. 1884). It has been suggested that Twain, who knew Jarrold, plagiarized the idea from the 'Mickey Finn' series. Jarrold later wrote under the pseudonym 'Mickey Finn' and the name became a generic term for any Irishman - much like 'Paddy' today.
So, by 1903 there could well have been many people called or known as 'Mickey Finn'. Although Jarrold's, a.k.a. Mickey Finn's, story is interesting and predates the Chicago Mickey Finn's activities, there isn't anything to explicitly link him to the phrase. The only version of the story with any real supporting evidence is that of the Chicago saloon-keeper.
SLUT: Is a pejorative term for a person (usually female) who is more sexually promiscuous than is deemed socially acceptable. The term has traditionally been applied to women and is generally used as an insult or offensive term of disparagement. Slut has also been reclaimed as a slang term in the BDSM, polyamorous and gay and bisexual communities. It may be used by the person concerned as an expression of pride in their status, or as an expression of enviousness in the "success rate" of others. The term is not interchangeable with whore or prostitute as those terms denote a person who engages in sex for money. Etymology Although the ultimate origin of "slut" is unknown, it first appeared in Middle English (1402) as slutte, with the meaning "a dirty, untidy, or slovenly woman." Even earlier, Geoffrey Chaucer used the word "sluttish" (circa 1386) to describe a slovenly man, however, later uses appear almost exclusively associated with women. The modern sense of "a sexually promiscuous woman" dates to at least 1450. Another early meaning was "kitchen maid or drudge" (circa. 1450), a meaning retained as late as the 18th century, when hard knots of dough found in bread were referred to as "slut's pennies." A notable example of this use is Samuel Pepys's (February 1664) diary description of his servant girl as "an admirable slut" who "pleases us mightily, doing more service than both the others and deserves wages better".. In the 19th century, the word was used as a euphemism in place of BITCH in the sense of "a female dog. "Similar words appear in Dutch, German and Swedish dialects meaning "a dirty woman," indicating a common ancestor in Germanic languages. A popular theory connects "slut" to earlier Germanic forms meaning "slush" or "mud puddle," but this derivation remains in question. Please note that the word "slut" used in modern Swedish (and pronounced differently than in English) means "ending". Recent times have seen alternate slang usages of the word slut. Slut is often used against gay males and bisexuals, comparing them without merit as people who are promiscuous in that they have, or are reputed to have, many sexual partners, or whose sexuality is voracious, indiscriminate, and shameful. With BDSM, polyamorous and non-monogamous people, in usage taken from the book The Ethical Slut, the term has been reclaimed as an expression of choice to openly have multiple partners, and revel in that choice: "a slut is a person of any gender who has the courage to lead life according to the radical proposition that sex is nice and pleasure is good for you." A slut is a person who has taken control of their sexuality and has sex with whomever they choose, regardless of religious or social pressures or conventions to conform to a straight-laced monogamous lifestyle committed to one partner for life. The term has been taken back to express the rejection of the concept that government, society, or religion may judge or control one's personal liberties, and the right to control one's own sexuality. This modern application for the term has given it a less derogatory and a more experienced tone. The text in the vicinity of this tag needs citation." The term is also used (principally by women) to describe a woman dressed provocatively or a woman being overtly flirtatious.
|
 |
|
|
|
|