i stuMble

Discussion in 'Welcome' started by i stuMble, Jul 9, 2007.

  1. i stuMble

    i stuMble Nub Status CallMeMaybe?

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    finally got my damn comp fixed... took a while but thank god it finally did.

    nice to be back here.. i missed kickin all your asses.
    -violence

    heh awesome.. my avatar is still there.. i thought it would be gone by now.
  2. FUZiON

    FUZiON I'm here to fix your sink Administrator

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    welcome back
  3. erikwade

    erikwade Nub Status CallMeMaybe?

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    lol butzie once again u prove canada is stuck in the 80;s dude
  4. el-mero-mero

    el-mero-mero M.I.A. Status CallMeMaybe?

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  5. FUZiON

    FUZiON I'm here to fix your sink Administrator

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    lol, whats wrong with saying "dude"?
  6. Cletus

    Cletus Guest

    nothin wrong with dude.. "dude" makes up about 13% of my daily grammar..
  7. Cletus

    Cletus Guest

    Baaa..?
  8. DrawnInwarD

    DrawnInwarD M.I.A. Status Moderator

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    is there any truth to the rumour that "dude" is actually the medical term for a pimple on a donkey's ass?
  9. Cletus

    Cletus Guest

  10. A_PUPPY

    A_PUPPY Nub Status CallMeMaybe?

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  11. strudels

    strudels I love lamp Staff Member Administrator

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    i remember hearing when i was younger that dude was an elephants butt hair
  12. Italianman33

    Italianman33 Nub Status

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    " What is the origin and history of the word dude?

    The original meaning of this American-born word is still its first definition today, 'a man excessively concerned with his clothes, grooming and manners'. I thought that dude was an old word, but I thought wrong. I guess it's because the word sounds vaguely like duke, and all those titles of royalty are fairly ancient. But dude first appeared in print in 1878. The Random House Historical Dictionary of American Slang cites an 1877 reference in a letter--not published, however, until 1988--from the painter and sculptor Frederick Remington: "Don't send me any more [drawings of] women or any more dudes." By 1883, dude was in wider circulation. In June of that year, its popularity was noted by Massachusetts’ North Adams Transcript: "The new coined word 'dude'...has travelled over the country with a great deal of rapidity since but two months ago it grew into general use in New York." By 1885, it had established a strong enough foothold to appear in Ulysses S. Grant's Personal Memoirs: "Before the car I was in had started, a dapper little fellow--he would be called a dude at this day--stepped in."

    Fairly soon, a dude came to mean an Easterner or a city slicker, and especially someone who vacations on a ranch--thus dude ranch.

    Dude also spawned quite a few odd derivatives, such as dudedom, dudeness, dudery, dudism, dudish, dudess and dudine--the last two meaning 'female dudes'. None of these is in general use today. I thought dudess might have had a revival as part of the surfer culture; however, Malia Alani of Surfer Magazine said no. She e-mailed me that "I don't think there is a feminine word for dude. A traditional Hawaiian word used commonly for women surfers is wahine." (Note: following the appearance of the column, several readers have informed me that dudette is the feminine form of dude. A quick search of Nexis confirms the word is, in fact, current. Thanks, everyone.)

    The meaning of the word as 'a male person' has been in wide use since the 1960's. This is from a 1968 book called College Drug Scene: "And I got into symbolic logic and semantics with a cat who had studied with Korzybski and electronics from a dude who had an Associate of Arts degree in anthropology from 1941." The use of dude in direct address to a male began much earlier. This is from a 1945 book called Silversides: "Hey, dude, there's a ship out here!"

    The origin of dude is uncertain. There are a few speculations, the most interesting of which, to my mind, is from A Dictionary of Slang by Eric Partridge. He says that it may have come from the word dud--which, at the time, meant 'a delicate weakling'--"influenced by attitude."
  13. Italianman33

    Italianman33 Nub Status

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    Historically, dude originally meant "old rags" -- a "dudesman" was a scarecrow. In the late 1800s, a "dude" was akin to a "dandy," a meticulously dressed man, especially out West. It became "cool" in the 1930s and 1940s, according to Kiesling. Dude began its rise in the teenage lexicon with the 1981 movie "Fast Times at Ridgemont High."
  14. Italianman33

    Italianman33 Nub Status

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    Wow, Italian that's interesting where did you find that shit? You must have a lot of time on your hands. I can't believe you let go of your meatstick long enough to look this up!
  15. major_badass

    major_badass M.I.A. Status

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