I've been getting quite sick of hering 'like a boss'. I mean there have been situations where were doing something like playing Brawl, and I beat someone and someone else says 'Like a boss!!'. It's becoming iritaiting as heck.
This.Zoomy said:People who express how little they care about something with "I could care less". No, you fools, it's couldn't.
bad example maybe,there's also:Smithburg said:geK0 said:It drives me insane when people use the word "ew" out of context!!
"ew I know him!"
"what? do you not like him?"
"he's one of my best friends, why wouldn't I like him?"
I think they're saying it like "Oooh"
What does actually mean? I always assumed it was something along the lines of destroy/divide up.Hydro14 said:'Decimate'
Apologies to anyone who was trying to get in before this one cropped up. So often misused and it actually makes me flinch.
I think that's a British thing.Booze Zombie said:Probably people in real life go "innit", though that's fairly amusing and not rage enducing.
Oh yes, it is so very British. Well, mostly English, really.zehydra said:I think that's a British thing.
OT: probably "hater".
This, too.itchcrotch said:epic
Macrobstar said:Because its pronounced Nu- CLE- Armartin said:What's wrong with the way someone says Nook-u-lur?
Don't want to be a twat, but isn't saying one thing when you clearly mean something else sarcasm? (Not a rhetorical question)Eggbert said:"Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen had excellent writing," is ironic, and I won't explain why.