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  • Pissed vs Pissed off - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Hence pissed off pissed off Disgruntled, 'fed up'; very much displeased (with someone or something): since late 1940s, Services; in 1970s very common among students It thus appears that U S English slang and British English slang ran on separate tracks for a long time, but that both now acknowledge and use the "angry" sense of pissed off
  • Are the expressions pissed and pissed off inappropriate?
    That is, I've heard them used, particularly pissed, in surprisingly polite company Note: Pissed off is universally understood, but pissed has different meanings In North America, it is synonymous with pissed off, but in the UK it means 'inebriated' Also, we are fond of telling people to 'piss off!' which means something different still
  • How did pissed come to mean drunk or angry?
    Pissed-off (or P'd off) This means, roughly, fed-up, irritated, depressed I have no idea of its history The British say browned off and it may be that the Americans who borrowed the phrase simply felt that 'browned' was not strong enough The superlative is, for some reason, highly pissed off, which may also be a Briticism
  • single word requests - Synonym for pissed off - English Language . . .
    I was really pissed off at someone the other day so after fuming in private and thinking about it for a bit I told the person in a calm yet firm manner what I was pissed off about (I had condensed it to about 12 words) and then I said (calmly yet firmly-rather matter-of-factly) "I am not at all happy about this "
  • Is it acceptable to say curse words if they are the title of a work?
    @ErikKowal, I am sure you are correct If you used the term "pissed off" here (NW USA) in court, or at a parish council meeting, you'd get admonished or at least that look that freezes That's exactly why I gave the warning: it is not yet 100% inoffensive The f-word has more power to offend
  • What does the British idiom taking the piss mean?
    Just off the top of my head: piss - urine, to urinate (The main literal meaning, of course ) take the piss out of (someone something) - to make fun of pissed - drunk, roughly equivalent to hammered in AmE on the piss - out drinking, similar to on the town, on the tiles piss (someone) off - to offend, irritate, anger
  • meaning - What does I pissed the wall mean? - English Language . . .
    For the whole house of Ahab shall perish: and I will cut off from Ahab him that pisseth against the wall, and him that is shut up and left in Israel: and I will make the house of Ahab like the house of Jeroboam the son of Nebat, and like the house of Baasha the son of Ahija: and the dogs shall eat Jezebel in the portion of Jezreel, and there
  • AmE usage of tick off - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    ticked off = tee'd off tick [someone] off To annoy; to make angry Usu in the passive This dictionary reproduces the entry for "tee'd off" that originally appeared in Wentworth Flexner, Dictionary of American Slang, first edition (1960): tee'd off[;] teed off[;] t'd off adj Angry, fed up; disgusted See pissed off
  • Looking for a slang expression to say I´m pissed off and sad. I want . . .
    It might not make much sense, but when you’re pissed off and sad, and just want to be left alone, you can turn the tables and tell everyone around to just “piss off”! – Papa Poule Commented Feb 17, 2016 at 19:34
  • grammaticality - How can I explain to people that the phrase “off of . . .
    How can I explain to people that the phrase "off of" is grammatically incorrect? You can't, because it's not There are thousands of examples of “off of” in the Corpus of Contemporary American English, not just in spoken English, but in magazines, newspapers, and academic journals as well “Off of” is well-established as standard in





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