Need help: Photoshop molested children portraits?
P. J. Alling
webster26 at mindspring.com
Wed Oct 4 10:50:51 EST 2006
Well isn't that what buggery is stuffing something up?
David Savage wrote:
>It's pretty mild language here. I tend to utter it when something stuffs up.
>
>An ad campaign a few years ago for Toyota New Zealand featured it quite heavily:
>
><http://www.videofoundry.co.nz/ianman/humour/bugger.html>
>
>>From what I've read it received 100+ official complaints in NZ and 1 here in Oz.
>
>I guess there are more prudes in New Zealand ;-)
>
>Dave
>
>On 10/4/06, Godfrey DiGiorgi <godders at mac.com> wrote:
>
>
>>I don't know what the issue is other than prudishness.
>>
>>To bugger someone means to have anal intercourse with them. Seems to
>>be this parlance that is more British English than American English,
>>though. To call something a "nasty little bugger" is often used in
>>American English to mean something small, insect like, an annoyance,
>>or "cute little bugger" is a form of curmudgeonly endearment.
>>
>>
>
>
>
--
Things should be made as simple as possible -- but no simpler.
--Albert Einstein
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