IS IT "A TOUGH ROW TO HOE?", OR "A TOUGH ROAD TO HOLD?"
Mar 27, 2012 0 I believe the road/hoe, and the road/hold sayings are the results of mishearing, or purposely changing the original row/hoe saying. Similarly, on occasions, I have changed the expression "don't look a gift horse in the mouth" to "don't lick a sick horse in the mouth" just to get a laugh. However, we all know the original meaning. From bing.com
"SL*T" TERM FOR MALES - ENGLISH LANGUAGE & USAGE STACK EXCHANGE
Aug 13, 2011 "Slut" can have two meanings: an immoral woman, or prostitute a dirty and slovenly woman I would like a term for men that is the equivalent of the second meaning. Is there a term for describing a man From bing.com
ETYMOLOGY - DOES THE USAGE OF "HO" OR "HOE" FOR "WHORE" PREDATE …
Jul 2, 2022 This question relates to the questions Where in Ireland, if anywhere, at the time of James Joyce, would "hoe" and "whore" sound similar enough to pun?, and Does Joyce, in Finnegans Wake or Ulysses, link the sound form "hoe" to "whore"?. If "ho" or "hoe" were used for "whore" prior to the 20th century, both these questions have simple answers. From bing.com
SYNONYMS - IS "HO"/"HOE" BASICALLY AN EQUIVALENT OF "WHORE" WHICH ...
Sep 25, 2019 It's a hard question to answer definitively—because the meaning of "ho/hoe" is affected by its cultural associations. Specifically, many Americans of European ethnicity associate the term with caricatures of African American culture. So, for example, a white kid at a mostly white suburban high school might refer to his or her white girlfriend as a "ho" and automatically embed a jokey faux ... From bing.com
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