So he has to prove himself/herself to you/y’all? :dubious:
You sound like the kind of [being] who’d volunteer to police the bathrooms (and zoo cages).
So he has to prove himself/herself to you/y’all? :dubious:
You sound like the kind of [being] who’d volunteer to police the bathrooms (and zoo cages).
Not it has not.
My companion admitted not knowing for sure – that’s why I came here to ask!
She had it in her mind that it was like “towelhead,” and that it referred to some regional ethnicity where the people were too stupid to have shoes.
It isn’t an intrinsically incorrect idea. Again, “towelhead” exists as a significant nasty ethnic slur, and so “toerag” might have. Now, in fact, it doesn’t, but I’d rather be safe, and that’s why I asked.
(Also note that “towelhead” doesn’t allude to any specific race or ethnicity, but to a clothing/headwear tradition.)
I’m just talking about a minimum level of sustainable believability. It doesn’t have to be a tail, although see the first sentence in the Wiki on monkey. Does he tend to have a lot of fun when associating with monkeys (more fun than a barrel of )? Does he engage in mimicry at all ( see, _____ do)? Anything along these lines would help to make his case. And let’s face it, if he is going to make a claim of this sort, he does have a case to make. Transpeciesism is really pushing the envelope.
As far as policing bathrooms, I’m not going down that road to the county lockup quite so quickly again.
Many moons ago, I heard the term used at mills and grain silos in Southern Georgia. I can’t find an example of that on line, but here’s something close, and they are being used in the same way. Wrapping the boots in rags kept street dirt out of the grain, and spread the weight to keep the legs from sinking in.
TruCelt: From the site you linked… “I have to point out that properly folded toerag is much more easing for the foot in long treks than a sock.”
Now I’m wondering how to fold one, as I’m fond of walking for exercise, and this whole affair started with a toe-blister!
NM
There are fashions in car-naming. Back in the 80s and 90s, it was all about naming your cars after mysterious desert/ocean winds (Mistral, Scirocco), then we went through a phase where the names would sound like two halves of different words jammed together.
Lately, we’re getting cars named after rugged, noble, little-known tribes (Tuareg, Qashqai).
They hate to admit it, but Germans have always felt jealous of the natural superiority of the French. That’s why they keep invading.
Like the late Earl Warren?
Does he fling shit at people he doesn’t like?