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Annoying trendy sayings people use

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  • #61
    Originally posted by jammeejamm View Post
    what about stuff that needs to come back?

    sup whoadie.
    Wingy Dingy?

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    • #62
      Originally posted by Mike View Post
      Wingy Dingy?
      I actually plan on doing that tonight in the shower....

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      • #63
        Out of pocket....shit doesn't even make sense.

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        • #64
          ha! you are a collision center guy right?

          fuck you and your pockets. call the insurance company bitch.

          i hate that too. my attitude changes completely when i hear someone say that.

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          • #65
            Originally posted by GeorgeG. View Post
            Out of pocket....shit doesn't even make sense.
            Like insurance terms? How does it not make sense?

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            • #66
              well, no, not in that sense. I hear it with people in an office. It's used when someone will be on vacation and will not be available by phone or do not expect to have service where they're going.

              "I'll be out of pocket the week of...."

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              • #67
                Originally posted by GeorgeG. View Post
                well, no, not in that sense. I hear it with people in an office. It's used when someone will be on vacation and will not be available by phone or do not expect to have service where they're going.

                "I'll be out of pocket the week of...."
                at my old company, it was used often, since we were always "away from our desk in the field"

                It never made sense to me either, so I started asking. The best explanation I heard, true or not, was that when cell phones werent everywhere, if you werent in your office, and you have to make a call, you were pulling a quarter out of your pocket at the pay phone to make a call.
                "If I asked people what they wanted, they would have said faster horses." - Henry Ford

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                • #68
                  I used the term "on fleek" the other day in the correct context. It felt dirty and wrong afterward. I have not/won't use:

                  adorbs
                  totes
                  totes the goat
                  dank

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                  • #69
                    Originally posted by Frank View Post
                    I used the term "on fleek" the other day in the correct context. It felt dirty and wrong afterward. I have not/won't use:


                    totes the goat
                    good because it's totes ma goats

                    don't want you not saying the wrong phrase

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                    • #70
                      LMAO at totes the goat!

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                      • #71
                        We'll keep it to a high level conversation for now, and have offline discussions later to discuss in detail.

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                        • #72
                          Originally posted by Baron Von Crowder View Post
                          at my old company, it was used often, since we were always "away from our desk in the field"

                          It never made sense to me either, so I started asking. The best explanation I heard, true or not, was that when cell phones werent everywhere, if you werent in your office, and you have to make a call, you were pulling a quarter out of your pocket at the pay phone to make a call.
                          I remember being told it was from the oil field days (very Texas term) when radios were used or even the first short band "cell phones". Being out of pocket meant you were unreachable via radio, not within signal range (pocket)

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                          • #73
                            Originally posted by jluv View Post
                            LMAO at totes the goat!
                            that's a nice goat tote!

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                            • #74
                              You ain't fixin to bust a grape
                              Lemme drop some science on your dome
                              Don't come up in here rayfillin'

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                              • #75
                                Originally posted by Silverback View Post
                                I remember being told it was from the oil field days (very Texas term) when radios were used or even the first short band "cell phones". Being out of pocket meant you were unreachable via radio, not within signal range (pocket)
                                could be, who really knows anyway?

                                "sorry, he's out of pocket"

                                "well tell him to drop a dime to me when he checks in"
                                "If I asked people what they wanted, they would have said faster horses." - Henry Ford

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