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Etymology of bullshit by etymonline


Etymology of bullshit by etymonline

bullshit (n.) also bull shit, "eloquent and insincere rhetoric," 1914, American English slang; see bull (n.1) + shit (n.), probably because it smells.

Bullshit - Wikipedia

Etymology · "Bull", meaning nonsense, dates from the 17th century, while the term "bullshit" has been used as early as 1915 in British and American slang and ...

When and how did the word "bullshit" come to mean "false ... - Reddit

It's actually a contraction of "bull" (lies) and "shit" (excrement) and is therefore related to "bollocks" and comes to English via the French word bole.

bullshit, n. meanings, etymology and more - Oxford English Dictionary

The earliest known use of the noun bullshit is in the 1910s. OED's earliest evidence for bullshit is from around 1910, in the writing of T. S. Eliot, poet, ...

BS | Etymology of BS by etymonline

Origin of BS: c. 1900, slang abbreviation of bullshit (q.v.). ... See more.

What's the etymology of the phrase 'bullshit', and how did it ... - Quora

It has been suggested that 'bull' came from the Old French word bole meaning 'deception, trick, scheming or intrigue', and predated 'bullshit'.

What is the origin of the phrase 'that's bullshit'? - Quora

Bullshit as its own term is first attested in 1916, or maybe a few years earlier, in an unpublished TS Eliot poem entitled "The Triumph of Bullshit".

Etymology of bull by etymonline

"male of a bovine animal," c. ... The other possibility [Watkins] is that the Germanic word is from PIE root *bhel- (2) "to blow, swell." An ...

bullshit - Wiktionary, the free dictionary

Borrowed from English bullshit. In oral use since 1950-s or even before (written form attested in Norwegian Bokmål source as bullskitt in 1959). Pronunciation.

Etymology of batshit by etymonline

in the slang sense; from bat (n.2) + shit (n.). Also by 1966 meaning "crazy." Sense shift is perhaps from the notion of nonsense to confusion to ...

Etymology of bushwa by etymonline

also bull shit, "eloquent and insincere rhetoric," 1914, American English slang; see bull (n.1) + shit (n.), probably because it smells.

Etymology of bullish by etymonline

1560s, "of the nature of a bull," from bull (n.1) + -ish; stock market sense of "tending to advance in price" is from 1882. Related: Bullishly; ...

shit | Etymology of shit by etymonline

Old English scitan, from Proto-Germanic *skit- (source also of North Frisian skitj, Dutch schijten, German scheissen), from PIE root *skei- "to cut, split."

Oh Shit - UW Tacoma Digital Commons

Ingenious Trifling. N.d. Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved March. 1, 2014. http://etymonline.com/baloney.php. Shit. N.d. Oxford Dictionaries ...

Online Etymology Dictionary | LinkedIn

... etymonline, the internet's go-to source for word histories ... It will spew bales of fact-shaped bullshit. And would you like to buy ...

I don't mean to single out... - Online Etymology Dictionary | Facebook

I don't mean to single out the person who wrote this, because the mistake is common: "According to etymonline.com, the etymology of the ...

Bullshit (Also Bullcrap) Is A Common | PDF | Lexicology - Scribd

The word "bull" itself may have derived from the Old French boul meaning "fraud, deceit" (Oxford English Dictionary).[2] The term "horseshit" is a near synonym.

baloney / blarney - Wordorigins Discussion Forums

He drew out the first syllable a little to make the audience think he was going to say "bullshit" but then it came out "baloney". Etymonline.com says baloney in ...

Glossary of British terms not widely used in the United States

shoe repairers; (slang) a weaker version of bollocks, meaning 'nonsense ... Etymonline.com. Retrieved 2013-01-24. ^ blague; ^ "BLOCK OF FLATS | English ...

batty | Etymology of batty by etymonline

also bat-shit, by 1943 as a variant of bullshit (n.) in the slang sense; from bat (n.2) + shit (n.). Also by 1966 meaning "crazy." Sense ...