Boston

Man Whore. eom
machito 9 Reviews 890 reads
posted
1 / 10

Something that is genuinely derogatory relating to a person's loose  morals (other than "mimbo" which comes from Seinfeld. I would say a "donald" but that could be any slimeball. Is that one word or two? On a serious note I think slut is a stupid word.

-- Modified on 7/19/2017 12:43:29 PM

mrfisher 115 Reviews 99 reads
posted
2 / 10

That's the thing about trying to insult a man in terms of shaming him for being too horny.  Whatever you come up with, we will wear it as a badge of honor.

 
On the other hand, women traditionally have wanted to project an aura of purity, so any, even a slight suggestion of carnality, comes across as an insult.

 
In fact, it is the suggestion that a man can't perform sexually that comes off as an insult, so call us eunuchs if you really want to get to us.

emorf4077 69 Reviews 71 reads
posted
6 / 10

As in, "he's so horny he'd fuck a snake." Mr. Fisher nailed it, though. Most slut-based male insults can be turned into badges of honor. Casanova, gigolo, horn dog, wolf, etc., can all have a "pat on the back, wink, wink" connotation.

JakeFromStateFarm 81 reads
posted
7 / 10


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nothrofboston 24 Reviews 82 reads
posted
8 / 10

more considerate of this forum ... dick$TER

mrfisher 115 Reviews 123 reads
posted
9 / 10

It is pretty whimsical and fun to say:

 Pronunciation:  chee-chiz-bay-o      

Part of Speech: Noun

Meaning: 1. (Obsolete but still fun) A knotted, decorative ribbon attached to the handle of a sword, walking cane, umbrella, fan, etc. 2. A cavalier servente of a married woman, a dangler about married women, a man who professionally accompanies married women or unprofessionally pursues them.

Notes: My blog on the glut of  pejorative names for female lovers in the absence of such for men resulted in a surprising response. Ed Garvin suggested that we do have a pejorative word specifically for a male lover (aside from gigolo, which I conceded), so I made it today's Good Word. It is a word that has refused for ages to surrender its Italian plural cicisbei, pronounced [chee-cheez-bay-ee].

In Play: Even though I don't think this rarely used word damages my argument that we have more negative words for female than for male lovers, it is curious enough that I thought we would all enjoy it: "Armin, I saw that cicisbeo Phil Anders parked in front of your house while you were away in Mexico last week!" And we all thought Phil was a professional cicisbeo who only accompanied married women for their protection and with their husbands' consent.

Word History: This word is such an esoteric one etymologists have paid it no attention. The pronunciation of CI as [chee] gives it away as an Italian word, maybe borrowed from French chiche beau "cute chickpea". The other hypothesis is that it came from a word in the Venetian dialect cici "women's chatter", but that would leave us with an inexplicable SBEO. I prefer the first one since beau is associated with boyfriends in some languages outside French. However, the long and short of it is, no one really knows. (Let's thank Ed Garvin for coming up with this curious old word and hope he didn't learn it from experience.)

wabbitt3730 22 Reviews 97 reads
posted
10 / 10
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