Why is there no "woman up"?

1 Answer

Answer :

Because men “rise” to the occasion.

Related questions

Description : At about what age should a young woman no longer be referred to as a "girl"?

Last Answer : Use young lady or woman, says I. I think that some won’t think anything of it, but some will find it, not necessarily offensive, but perhaps less than perfect. It’s more refined sounding in any case.

Description : I'm Canadian and I am dating a woman from the States (we've been together 3 years). I am just now able to pick up the Canadian accent from other Canucks. Why now?

Last Answer : answer:You tell me, eh? Truth is – it’s not that distinctive in the more metro areas. I haven’t heard a real ABOOT unless it was way out in rural Ontario. The Canuck equivalent to rednecks, lol. Cold enough fer ya? That’s pretty Canadian, eh? And don’t get me started on the tabernac Franglais.

Description : If you grow up with absolutely no exposure to language, how do you think?

Last Answer : I think about this ALL the time, no lie. It is one of those questions that I’ve never been able to answer for myself… though I’ve never attempted to research it, either. My best guess is that all thoughts would be in images.

Description : If you "give your word", how can you be expected to "keep it", if you no longer have it?

Last Answer : This is what pockets are for.

Description : What does "There is no there there" mean?

Last Answer : Yes, when someone says that there is nothing at a location. Like most of Kansas.

Description : Which centuries are the pivot point when "turn of the century" is the current description, and no further explanation is given?

Last Answer : The intention could be either 19th/20th or 20th/21st – you have to use other clues to figure out which.

Description : What do we mean when we say, "yes -- no"?

Last Answer : I think it means we are indecisive and we don’t know our own mind.

Description : Are you offended personally or otherwise by phrases like 'no homo'?

Last Answer : I can’t speak for “no homo”, but I KNOW “gay” means something entirely different nowadays (IN ADDITION to the old meaning). The new meaning has nothing to do with homosexuality. I heard some kids using it and found out, much to my surprise.

Description : What phrases have your parents or grandparents used that are no longer popular?

Last Answer : “Take the bitter with the sweet” “Great Day in the Morning”

Description : "Oh no you di’nt!" What's going on here?

Last Answer : I’ve always seen “Oh no you di’int” in response to an action the speaker is angry about: it’s a sort of mock-disbelief to emphasize the improper or impolite nature of the action in question. “I saw Bill checking out your wife the other day—maybe he thinks he can slip one by you.” “Oh no, he di’int!”

Description : Is there anything for which there is no name?

Last Answer : When we don’t have one, we make one. I suppose there are no names for things we have not yet discovered.

Description : If you grew up in the '50s and '60s what did you call the loud, cylindrical firework with the fuse coming out the side?

Last Answer : A ½ stick of Dynamite? haha

Description : We grew up calling it an "Oklahoma Hankie"; what is it called where you live?

Last Answer : answer:New York city: I call it, “ew, that’s fucking gross.”

Description : Made-up words for specific terms or expressions, a la Grok?

Last Answer : Ansible.

Description : Can you come up with winning pickup lines?

Last Answer : Just starting with “Hi” works with me.

Description : "and then the cops showed up" Is what happens next a good thing or bad thing?

Last Answer : answer:When I was young, that was the gold standard for parties. Did the cops show up? Yes? Sweet! Awesome party!!

Description : When someone says, "You did a bang-up job" what does that mean?

Last Answer : That’s how sarcasm works. The idiom’s traditional meaning is that you did a good job. If someone says it sarcastically, they mean the opposite.

Description : How do I thank a professor for a great semester without sounding like a suck-up?

Last Answer : Say, “Thank you for a great semester”?

Description : Do curse words crack you up?

Last Answer : I don’t fuckin’ know. I cuss so damn much that I hardly notice when others do anyway, though a well placed “fucknugget” or “cuntmaster” will always make me chuckle a bit.

Description : When someone says, "You did a bang-up job" what does that mean?

Last Answer : That’s how sarcasm works. The idiom’s traditional meaning is that you did a good job. If someone says it sarcastically, they mean the opposite.

Description : Help me come up with a brilliant comeback?

Last Answer : Mine is on the 22nd of December and I never have had anything witty to say, so sorry-but I will follow this thread. I think your comment is pretty freaking great….

Description : Have you ever made up your own little phrases or hand gestures that are kind of odd to everyone else, but make perfect sense to you, and you take pleasure in knowing that?

Last Answer : I do this a lot, except my sayings are rather obscure. Only people really close to me know what the hell I'm talking about - this makes for fun times when I'm in an awkward situation and a friend happens ... also helps me in that I don't get too swept away in drama when I inject some humour into it.

Description : Don't you just hate some new made-up words?

Last Answer : Yes. “Unfriended” makes me want to vomit.

Description : Are you telling me the best we could come up with is "de-plane-ing"?

Last Answer : disembark

Description : Why "stand-up comedian"? Why not just "comedian"?

Last Answer : Cause some comedians sit down. Heh. And no, I don’t know why this was necessary.

Description : I need to brush up on my german in the next couple weeks...any ideas?

Last Answer : rent, download, or borrow (friends, library) movies in german - watch with english subtitles (depending on your level) - this was very helpful for me

Description : What's up with the "Proust questionaire" in every issue of Vanity Fair?

Last Answer : answer:From George Loper: “The young Marcel was asked to fill out questionnaires at two social events: one when he was 13, another when he was 20. Proust did not invent this party game; he is simply the most extraordinary person to respond to them.”

Description : Whats a good way to refer to the group of gods that make up a poltheistic system of beliefs?

Last Answer : One word that sums up “celestial power orgy?” Hmmmmmmm. Wouldn’t the word “gods” work there?

Description : The blaze lit up the escaped diners with a light greater than any other that could be produced in the night' can be paraphrased as (1) The fire set all the escaped diners ablaze.' (2) The light ... clearly.' (4) The fire burned in such a way that the writer could see the escaped diners clearly.'

Last Answer : (4) ‘The fire burned in such a way that the writer could see the escaped diners clearly.'

Description : What current linguistic oddities will baffle future archaeologists when they stumble upon them?

Last Answer : Greatest Of All Time G O A T

Description : Is German a difficult language to learn?

Last Answer : Depends on one's mother tongue, one's ability to learn languages in general (some have it easy, others less so),and possibly also one's age. For me, being Dutch (neighbor of Germany, and speaking a ... with Spanish, but French have less difficulty with Spanish). I'll have a look if I can find it.

Description : Do you think Joe Rogan should be "canceled" for his use of the N word?

Last Answer : No. Let him suffer the slings and arrow of his choice of words. People are, generally speaking, stupid. And some prove it all the time.

Description : When do you use "molten" vs "melted"?

Last Answer : “molten” historically was simply the past participle of “melt” and thus synonymous with “melted” but now is used as an adjective to refer to things that have been melted by very high heat and are hot in their liquid form like metal or rock or wax. “Melted” would be used otherwise.

Description : Does anyone still use the word "cyberspace"?

Last Answer : Yes, it's just been more normalized and less sensationalized. It's used by the (US and British, anyway) military, some academics, and businesses which still use it to sound like they know about ... a TV-like remote control and TV in the living room rather than a physical keyboard at a desk.

Description : What writing of Joan Didion, who died today, did you enjoy?

Last Answer : I believe I’ve only read The Year of Magical Thinking which was great. I also saw Vanessa Redgrave perform in a one woman play based on that book.

Description : Can you explain to me, in plain language, when to use plural and singular after "any"?

Last Answer : Here is a nice lesson on using any. In essence, Any is normally used with plural and uncountable nouns in questions, negative and conditional sentences.

Description : What do I message to a person whom I like..... to start a meaningful conversation (without showing that I'm interested in him)

Last Answer : The funny part is that you ARE interested in hm, but you don't want to show it. Maybe when you turn 16, you will understand that coyness doesn't get you very far, but that honesty does. Did you ever ... . If he's as smart as you say, he will either know, or he'll engage in conversation with you.

Description : Why is a recorder called a "recorder", when said recorder does not record anything?

Last Answer : Since the instrument is first noted during the middle ages, why is a tape machine called a recorder ?

Description : "The Okay-ish Barrier Reef". Can you change the adjective great in famous sayings/names to another one?

Last Answer : Alexander the Meh. Ivan the meanie.

Description : Is there a term for the act of changing the spelling of a word, to force it to rhyme with another?

Last Answer : Oh loli! It’s prolly…Neoligism.

Description : Did you ever experience this strange memory failure?

Last Answer : I had an excellent command of words and could normally find the word that fits a situation or sentence. Unfortunately I, like you, now suffer the same affliction. In my case it is probably the fact ... sure it is likely to be something that may improve or is easily rectified with the correct help.

Description : Since air essentially behaves like a fluid, would it not be accurate to say, that aeroplanes swim through the air?

Last Answer : Fluid ≠ liquid. Gases and liquids are both fluids, as are plasmas. But swimming and drowning are ways of interacting with liquids specifically, not fluids generally.

Description : Should a patient be relieved about the medical term ''grossly unremarkable''? See detail.

Last Answer : Yes, particularly when we’re older. I got a summary of “regular guy” from my MD once. I was mostly relieved, but slightly disappointed. I don’t think I’ll ever live up to my pediatrician’s comment to my mom once that he didn’t think he’d seen such a healthy child before.

Description : Is the term "half-assed", the term to describe something done without the appropriate care, just a malapropism of "haphazard"?

Last Answer : No – I don’t think so. I think it evolved separately. Although I don’t really know why we would say something was done in a “full-assed” way.

Description : When something "puts you off", it is "off-putting". Is it then not logical to say, that when something "pisses you off", it is "off-pissing"?

Last Answer : Only in pun logic. Put off is an expression meaning to delay. Off-putting is an expression meaning unlikable. Are there truly any actual, always applicant rules in language? - Not many. Is ... get passing grades. Would it not be better to just teach them all Plankalkül? - It would not.

Description : Since Meowth was able to teach himself human speech, why are other Pokémon not taught to speak as well?

Last Answer : Most pokemon are wild, or bred in captivity, but Meowth is the only truly domesticated breed. It's a Pokemon that has a natural attraction to money, and even evolves with a coin ... those strange human languages, which are word based, rather than purely inflection based like Pokemon languages.

Description : In a real estate context, what is "like-minded" code language for?

Last Answer : Since he doesn’t know you, I’m assuming he knows how much you are willing to spend so I would think he’s referring to your socioeconomic status, or what he perceives it to be based on your income.

Description : How do you eliminate any possible ambiguity from the following sentence?

Last Answer : Within each group, everybody spoke the same language.

Description : Have you noticed more and more people using the Briticism "jab" for shot or inoculation lately?

Last Answer : Easier to say: jab - 3 letters, one syllable shot - 4 letters one syllable inoculation - 11 letters - 4 syllables vaccine - 7 letters - 2 syllables People go for the simplest. It's human ... Star Wars people. They could build small buildings for nurses and doctors, and advertise: Jabber in the Hut

Description : Is the word "shrooms" exclusive to fungi containing psychoactive compoinds, or can you use it for normal mushrooms, too?

Last Answer : I, and people I know, have also used it as shorthand for mushrooms being prepared and then eaten for a meal. “You want shrooms in your omelet?” “Ordering pizza? Get one with shrooms.” That is different from “shrooming”, which has to do with being under the influence of magic psilocybin mushrooms.