PennameWombat
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Oct 5, 2018
- Posts
- 1,300
’Panties’ is a word that confuses me. Not that I dislike the word, but I am a native speaker of American English. Americans use the word. In American English, it’s not controversial, it’s not weird, it’s not strange, it’s not annoying. I have zero personal experience with any American woman I’ve ever known finding the word anything but normal.Double bagger - someone so ugly you put a bag on your own head in case their's splits
We hate panties in the UK, we call them knickers
While I live in Oz and have broad understanding of multiple dialects of English, when I set a story in America, with American characters, and it’s appropriate, I might well use “panties” in dialogue. Period. I’ve also used ‘knickers’ in some SF&F stories, where the history wasn’t so clear. This is a long-winded way of saying I do not understand the issue with ‘panties.’ If it means you’d immediately stop reading a story and one-star it just because of that word, that REALLY confuses me.
Run down the curtain and joined the bleeding choir invisible[1].There's a wealth of expressions for surprise in the UK - 'I'll go to the foot of our stairs, shut the fridge door, hit me backspace, pop-up tent' but they depend on context and how they're spoken.
Death and dying is a popular source of platitude - carped it, pegged it, turned up his toes, kicked the bucket, snuffed it, checked out ( though that's also a drug-related one ).
I've heard 'smashed' for sex but it sounds horrible - same as 'I slayed her' or come to that 'I fucked her brains out' that would be suitable for a zombie film I suppose.
In a city in which I used to live, one area was referred to as ‘Slabtown.’ Why? Because, in the ‘old days,’ wandering through that section of town meant you’d very possibly return from it ”on a slab.” (Dead.)
As to ”I fucked her/his brains out,” (or, “she/he fucked my brains out”) that’s another American phrase not at all unfamiliar to me that would be used after a, shall we say, raucous and wild night of the rumpy pumpy. While limited in people likely to use it (e.g., university students or other young people), it‘s not unusual to me.
[1] And everything else in the “Dead Parrot Sketch.”