FBI needs to pay attention to that manâs search historyâŠ
Incel Pedos telling on themselves. They canât seem to help but say they are some of the worst pieces of shit.
Quality post OP.
the arguably cooler sounding âSpinsterâ
You spin me right round, baby, right roundâŠ
Wasnât spinster some old school slang in like the 1920s or something about women who didnât settle down right away? Or am I hallucinating
Itâs quite a bit older than that. 1800s, I believe? A âspinsterâ was a women who got a job spinning/weaving fabric, which was one of the few jobs women were allowed at the time, and they were paid for it! Very well, iirc.
So a woman earning her own income and able to support herself, not being required to marry in order to live comfortably.
Yes, and well before that too. It meant an unmarried adult woman over the age of _____. (Here is where the discrepancy lies.) It was always true for an elderly woman. But could sometimes be applied all the way down to age 30, especially if you go far enough back that you were expected to be married in your 20s. (And if you werenât, there must be something wrong with you.)
Well Iâm unmarried, female and in my mid thirties and thereâs definitely something wrong with me. I now identify as a spinster.
When does one become a crone? Or is that for specifically when you forsake society to live in the wilds?
Be the Crone your heart wants you to be. Pointing a shaking finger while muttering at your enemies helps
People misspelling âwomanâ annoys the hell out of me. Itâs literally âmanâ prefixed by âwoâ. I donât know what bizarre process could lead to using âwomenâ instead. And itâs nearly always these Andrew-Tate-loving pound shop alphas.
That and âshould ofâ should be punishable by getting your hand cut off.
And itâs nearly always these Andrew-Tate-loving pound shop alphas.
Nah, itâs not that deepâtons of men and women make this particular mistake (writing âwomenâ when intending to use the singular âwomanâ) for some bizarre reason. Iâve observed this phenomenon for well over a decade. Notably, Iâve never really seen someone write âwomanâ when they mean âwomenâ, only the other direction. And never with man/men at all. Very odd, specific error.
Maybe itâs a âshould ofâ-type mistake, I can only guess. But what I know for sure is that itâs a very common mistake, and almost certainly unintentional.
This type of thing sometimes happens to me when Iâm writing a comment on my phone. The using a wrong version of a word, not the rampant misogyny. Its usually from changing how I wanted to structure the sentence, like changing tense or deciding to make something singular or plural, and not noticing that I missed updating one of the words.