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I've always liked it, though, because it's got more punch than "jerk", and yet it saves me from having to use language my friends consider swearwords, like 'bastard', 'son of a bitch', 'asshole', 'prick', 'dick', and so on.
Although it would be nice if we remembered what our pejorative terms actually meant. It reminds me of that scene in "Blast From The Past", where Alicia Silverstone's character uses the term "dickhead" to Brendan Fraser's naive, 1950's bomb-sheltered character, and he literally stops in his tracks, so shocked is he by the mental image of a walking, talking guy with a dick for a head. :D Reply
Although it would be nice if we remembered what our pejorative terms actually meant. It reminds me of that scene in "Blast From The Past", where Alicia Silverstone's character uses the term "dickhead" to Brendan Fraser's naive, 1950's bomb-sheltered character, and he literally stops in his tracks, so shocked is he by the mental image of a walking, talking guy with a dick for a head. :D Reply









