If this is just too rude, please; I apologize.
In this, “Why don’t you crawl back up in the hole you came out of”, what is the term “hole” referring to?
Peace,
mangeorge
I personally would interpret it as calling the person a worm or some kind of rodent.
Another variation is “crawl back under your rock”, meaning that you are some sort of vermin that lives in a hole or slime that lives in a dark, damp place.
I always interpreted it as a rough cave that a troll might live in.
A rodent like a mouse or rat, or a bug. But I don’t think I’ve ever heard it as “crawl back up in”, but just “crawl back into”.
Let’s move this over to IMHO.
Colibri
General Questions Moderator
“Hole you came out of” – possibly your mom’s vagina?
That’s what came to my mind as well.
It’s a very rude comment even if they don’t mean “asshole”.
Mine too.
“I seem to be having tremendous difficulty with my lifestyle.”
Stranger
In my experience, it’s more a like a cave or something. The implication is that you are a jerk who can’t handle being with people, or a monster, or, yes, a troll.
I’ve never heard it to mean vagina or asshole.
BTW, is this a parody thread or something? Maybe of that one guy asking if “asshole” was the worst word in the English language?
I’ve always assumed it’s a reference to hobbits.
Me too, but only because of the unusual phrasing: “crawl back up in”.
Without that, I would interpret it as meaning “go back to the (unpleasant) place you (most recently) crawled out of” - i.e. a cave, or burrow, implying you are some primitive, crawling, subhuman lifeform.
You are a retard, you cannot comprehend/appreciate this situation. Go back to your** comfort zone.**
Yes, the biggest clue is the word “up.” Any other hole, you’d be going “down” or “into.”
Yeah, I assume back up in your mom’s twat. I don’t know that I’ve heard that expression IRL before, but I am an exceptionally lovable person and have never been insulted.
“Jump back up your mother!” — Jenna Maroney
Yeah, this. “Crawl back into your hole,” etc. are more traditional forms but “crawl back up in the hole you came out of” is clearly meant to invoke something anatomical.
ETA: and in all likelihood, purposely taking advantage of the ambiguity of the phrase. “What? I just meant like, your cave!”
Despite what this board’s culture has led you to believe, not everything is a reference to hobbits.