Accidental innuendo
Freddy Woo writes, "A woman I used to work with once walked into a car workshop to get her windscreen replaced, and uttered the immortal line, "Have you seen the size of my crack?"
What innuendos have you accidentally walked into? Are you a 1970s Carry On film character?
Extra points for the inappropriateness of the context
( , Thu 12 Jun 2008, 12:05)
Freddy Woo writes, "A woman I used to work with once walked into a car workshop to get her windscreen replaced, and uttered the immortal line, "Have you seen the size of my crack?"
What innuendos have you accidentally walked into? Are you a 1970s Carry On film character?
Extra points for the inappropriateness of the context
( , Thu 12 Jun 2008, 12:05)
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slightly off topic...
A few days ago my boyfriend asked me "Is there such thing as an outtuendo?" Surely the answer is "No, don't be stupid" or "That would break the time-space continuum" but still I'm interested! It would probably mean something along the lines of "something seemingly so sexual that it no longer seems sexual and just a normal comment" or something like that! Any ideas or examples b3tards?
( , Thu 12 Jun 2008, 14:28, 3 replies)
A few days ago my boyfriend asked me "Is there such thing as an outtuendo?" Surely the answer is "No, don't be stupid" or "That would break the time-space continuum" but still I'm interested! It would probably mean something along the lines of "something seemingly so sexual that it no longer seems sexual and just a normal comment" or something like that! Any ideas or examples b3tards?
( , Thu 12 Jun 2008, 14:28, 3 replies)
I understand your question,
but I would wager that the etymology of the word has nothing to do with the word in. Sorry :(
( , Thu 12 Jun 2008, 14:30, closed)
but I would wager that the etymology of the word has nothing to do with the word in. Sorry :(
( , Thu 12 Jun 2008, 14:30, closed)
using sexual words to mean something else perhaps
eg: I'm going to fuck you up
( , Thu 12 Jun 2008, 14:31, closed)
eg: I'm going to fuck you up
( , Thu 12 Jun 2008, 14:31, closed)
Yeah, sorry.
www.etymonline.com/index.php?search=innuendo&searchmode=none
from the ger. innuere, to mean or indicate.
( , Thu 12 Jun 2008, 14:33, closed)
www.etymonline.com/index.php?search=innuendo&searchmode=none
from the ger. innuere, to mean or indicate.
( , Thu 12 Jun 2008, 14:33, closed)
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