Lexicon
From ThorxWiki
All your internet meme are belong to us
Screwtape and Nemo promote each others altered lexicon with intent to create a 15minutes of fame internet phenomena.
The List
- Cvte - Screwtape's replacement for "cute". (originated from some guy he knows.)
- Phuq - Nemo's replacement for "fuck". (originated from Wormey, or is at the least, Wormeyesque)
- Otay - sexy Jacq's replacement for "okay".
- D'bye - Terri's replacement for "goodbye".
- Aye - Nemo's laconic replacement for "Yes". For people who can't decide between "aye" and "yes", there's always aglami's "ye".
- fn - Screwtape's abbreviation for "fairy nuff", homophone for "fair enough".
- seso - Screwtape's code for "I'm just updating this wiki page so that a Mozilla crash doesn't lose all my work", an abbreviation for "save early, save often".
- -mahoozer - Suffix, original, by SnowHart. Used to add "oomph" to a word, or imply confusion when used hesitantly. Insert short "a" between most consonants and suffix itself. "Hey! Let go of my backpackamahoozer!" "Hey! Go get me that... Er... Wrenchamahoozer..."
- mrp - A sound, generally implying a sense of disappointed-ness or surprise, sometimes both at once. Is rarely spoken above a surprisedly loud mutter.
- Denied - Sneakums' dry response to any attempted criticism or, indeed, anything at all ever in the universe. (I don't say this anymore, because it has been seized and defiled by lamers. ~sneakums)
- Spanx - Jacq's thankyou
- piddle - Jacq's bathroom requirement notification
- gotto bounce - Jacq's strap-on to DarkAngel's Max
- Fan-Q - (Also, Fan Q) SnowHart made a vague attempt one day to say Fang-Queue. This came out. It's stuck ever since as a way to say "Thank-you".
- Clinical - As a statement of seriousness. (Like 'heavy' in the 80's). Derived from psychology, eg, 'Clinical Depression'
- Ostrich - in reference to emulating another person. Follow the link please.
- nonsensicle - A single element of nonsense, on a stick. (from a misspelling of 'nonsensical'). See here: http://www.livejournal.com/users/thristian/43405.html
Also: note please ISFN.
Note - Screwtape's little sister says that "otay" comes from The Little Rascals: http://us.imdb.com/Title?0110366
(Is Otay amenable to such modifications as "OT", "Otie", or "'t"?)
--Screwtape
"Otay" is more a spoken lexicon, than a written one... But written variance seems fair, in a similar manner to "Okay"
Some will work
- okay -> otay
- 'kay -> 'tay
others seem not to...
- OK -/> OT
- 'k -/> 't
- Okey-dokey -/> Otey-???
--Nemo
Otie-boatie?
--Screwtape
Oota goota, Screwtape?
OT means OFF-TOPIC, I copyrighted it when I was nine.
--Constable Whitmore of the Yard