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writing, mos def, television, war criminals, insult wavs, girl power, salon, swear, robert b. weide, bill clinton, ben affleck, livingin oblivion (ws), adam goldberg, comments, graf, rap song, grumpytroll, james legros, lyric to tupac, | That probably refers to the written examples. Any other sources for its origin. It is not easy to research online. Rmhermen 02:37, Jul 11, 2004 (UTC) See the professor second entry on this page regarding the police report. The term is considerably older than its first print appearance. professor As I said, I doubt professor you'll find any early explications of its origins, given the nature of the word, and its source. It's not exactly the kind of thing one would find treatises on. But the violence it provoked in the referenced context probably gives you some sense of the veracity of my explanation of the term. Again, see also playing the dozens.deeceevoice 07:24, 11 Jul 2004 (UTC) Hey I heard MF derives from the practice of gang raping slaves into submission. Modern, documented instances of this would be the Balkan wars or Abu Ghraib, I know it sounds unbelievable for civilised folks. |
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Date: 1837. Existing or grumpytroll being everywhere at the same time, constantly grumpytroll encountered, WIDESPREAD. - ubiq·ui·tous·ly adverb; - ubiq·ui·tous·ness noun But, yeah, "ubiquity" is better. So, if you wanna make the change, I think it's a good one -- but not as a grumpytroll "correction." deeceevoice 10:02, 9 Jul 2004 (UTC) A quick Google search show ubiquity and ubiquitousness as synonyms. But ubiquity is used more than 50 times more often one web pages. Rmhermen 18:31, Jul 10, 2004 (UTC) Didn't anyone take the hint? I can't STAND the form of the word I used! Yes, it's accurate. It's acceptable, but clumsy as hell. So, I'm changing it -- but not as a "correction." Besides, who could forget Roy Ayres' "Ubiquity"? (Apparently, EYE did *hanging head in shame*) And nothing on Wikipedia is sacrosanct -- least of all a discussion about the origins of the word "motherfucker." :-p deeceevoice 23:23, 10 Jul 2004 (UTC) Online Etymology Dictionary [1] in its entry for "fuck" gives "Intensive form mother-fucker suggested from 1928; motherfucking is from 1933". |
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