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Is Apostolic CUSSIN' sinful?
Some examples of Apostolic cussin':
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My favorite was ... PP"s ... Quote:
We use euphemisms every day and they are a creative part of language .... A euphemism is an expression intended by the speaker to be less offensive, disturbing, or troubling to the listener than the word or phrase it replaces, or in the case of doublespeak to make it less troublesome for the speaker. Some are absolutely harmless ... for example the euphemisms we use for DEATH. Wiki: The English language contains numerous euphemisms related to dying, death, burial, and the people and places which deal with death. The practice of using euphemisms for death is likely to have originated with the "magical belief that to speak the word "death" was to invite death; where to "draw Death's attention" is the ultimate bad fortune—a common theory holds that death is a taboo subject in most English-speaking cultures for precisely this reason. It may be said that one is not dying, but fading quickly because the end is near. People who have died are referred to as having passed away or passed or departed. Deceased is a euphemism for "dead," and sometimes the deceased is said to have gone to a better place, but this is used primarily among the religious with a concept of Heaven. Others include common euphemisms include...
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I am not the forum police or anywhere else for that matter. I have a hard enough time making sure my lips speak that which genders peace and not grief, both for my benefit and the hearer. |
uhoh................ lol
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Any statement made with the connotation of declaring something to be a negative thing, is the spirit of cursing, not just cussing. To speak a word to something as though to make it bad by virture of the very speech towards it is "cursing" it. Man, God laid that conviction on me a while ago.
A curse is technically the speaking forth of something to suffer. And it is the same spirit when we speak to something and label it a negative name, when it actually is not so. Similarly, when people say GOD BLESS YOU, it is a bl3essing put towards someone that through our proclamation of it we are changing that person's normal experience to be a blessed one from God Just a thought, anyway. |
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If a legalistic nazi calls a fellow member of charismatic are they cursing?
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Oh Goody,
A Chicken Cussin Thread Daniel, we do have multiquote ability and that works from thread to thread so we know who and where said what to whom and about what in the quotes. |
Some more of my AFF favorites include:
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I like when CC1 cusses. At least he uses the right words. Instead of saying hooey or ........ he will simply say feces. LOL!
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I think PP's "I don't give a flyin' fajita" is the winner.
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My favorite is bovine excrement...
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Flappin' floozy? Flippin' flapper? |
I know Renda is not fond of the TORO AWARD ....
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"Flyin' rat's tail" is a better one. |
When reading these I just hear in my head what is being said in the world daily.
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Should you be creating a new lesson plan for next quarter? Can you spend time re-arranging the algae in your aquarium instead of these kind of threads? :sshhh Guess not. :heeheehee |
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This may not really be on the topic of 'apostolic cussin', but since the subject of cussing was brought up. . here is something I have wondered about in the past (and I will warn you that I do wonder about wierd, if not often stupid things). Who decided cuss words would be just that. . .cuss words? I mean, who heard a word and decided 'hmm, I think that will be a cuss word' and people throughout the world, generation after generation would continue to view it as such? Who has that kind of influence? :dunno
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:didimiss:hug3:bouquet:cheer:rooting:bigbaby:whist le |
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Thomas Crapper (baptized September 28, 1836; d. January 27, 1910) was a plumber who founded Thomas Crapper & Co. Ltd. in London. Despite urban legend, Crapper did not invent the flush toilet (the myth being helped by the surname). However, Crapper put in effort to popularise it and did come up with some related inventions. He was noted for the quality of his products and received several Royal Warrants. The noun "........" was in use long before he was born, but no longer used in Victorian Britain. The manhole covers with Crapper's company's name on them in Westminster Abbey are now a minor tourist attraction. Contents The words "........" and "crapper" Main article: ........ The word "........" is old in the English language, one of a group of nouns applied to discarded cast offs, like "residue from renderings" (1490s) or in Shropshire, "dregs of beer or ale", meanings probably extended from Middle English crappe "chaff, or grain that has been trodden underfoot in a barn" (c. 1440), deriving ultimately from Late Latin crappa, "chaff." The word fell out of use in Britain by the 1600s, but remained prevalent in the North American colonies which would eventually become the United States. The meaning "to defecate" was recorded in the US since 1846 (according to Oxford and Merriam-Webster), but the word did not hold this meaning at all in Victorian England. The connection to Thomas Crapper is conjectured by Hart-Davis to be an unfortunate coincidence of his surname. The occupational name Crapper is a variant spelling of "Cropper". In the US, the word crapper is a dysphemism for "toilet," although it is not clear if this has anything to do with Thomas Crapper. The term first appeared in print in the 1930s. It has been suggested that US soldiers stationed in England during World War I (some of whom had little experience with indoor plumbing) saw many toilets printed with "T. Crapper" in the glaze and brought the word home as a synonym for "toilet" — a sort of back-formation from "........." Yet another purported explanation is that Crapper's flush toilet advertising was so widespread that "crapper" became a synonym for "toilet" and people simply assumed that he was the inventor. :laffatu |
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I wonder if a woman LIKE Nona Freeman ever cussed???
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I wonder if apostolic preachers cuss.
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*drool* |
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http://www.tcoflyfishing.com/images/...ir/All_med.jpg |
Tell me, is calling someone a Pharisee or an ultracon cussing? Isn't the intent to label someone in a negative way?
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