Inspired by this question that was posted by another member:
https://answermug.com/forums/topic/127310/do-you-say-supper-or-dinner-is-there-a-difference-by-the-w/view... more
Inspired by this question that was posted by another member:
https://answermug.com/forums/topic/127310/do-you-say-supper-or-dinner-is-there-a-difference-by-the-w/view/post_id/892408/page/1
My grandmother used it all the time, and I heard it in the old movies that came out when she was young. My grandmother was born in the 1920s in a tiny town of 900 people in Oklahoma and due to migrant farming, grew up in various places all over the country.
I‘m not sure if she only used the word in jest, or if she used it as her legitimate and appropriate way to talk about food (she passed away in 1989). I do remember that she used a lot of words that I understood to be from her country upbringing or Southern upbringing, for instance, she never once used the word “faucet”, she always, always, always said “hydrant”. Lol, I remember being five years old and when we went to her house, she would offer us a drink of water, and she’d as... less
For me, there were several:prohibited actionsproximity to residencejudicial decisionunsolicited communicationscivil penaltiesimmediate incarcerationreimbursement of complain... more
For me, there were several:prohibited actionsproximity to residencejudicial decisionunsolicited communicationscivil penaltiesimmediate incarcerationreimbursement of complaintant’s court costs and fees~
Especially in this day and age of metoo, political correctness, cancel culture, woke culture, etc. Even if and when meant in a truly innocuous way, it still can be construed o... moreEspecially in this day and age of metoo, political correctness, cancel culture, woke culture, etc. Even if and when meant in a truly innocuous way, it still can be construed or misconstrued in wholly negative ways.~