[scifinoir2] English Language Freed!

2009-01-20 Thread ravenadal
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/chi-talk-bushismsjan20,0,639700.story

George W. Bush's 'Bushisms' will be missed

America expects mangled dialect to make full recovery

By Christopher Borrelli | Tribune reporter

January 20, 2009

As of today, no longer will you watch your president improvise his way
toward coherence. No longer will you listen with suspense while the
leader of the free world manhandles Mother English into a balloon animal.

Many agree this is a good thing. But isn't there something to be said
for a president who is so empathetic that he understands how hard it
is for you to put food on your family? Like Thomas Jefferson, who
coined belittle, and John Adams, who created caucus, George W.
Bush has also given us some unique terms and phrasings—some of which
we don't want to see fade away:

Misunderestimate. verb. 1: to fail to estimate full worth because of
prior beliefs. Appears to date to Election Eve 2000. Different from
underestimate or misunderstand in that the act is snidely
presumptuous, not just a bad calculation, but one made with prejudice.

The Decider. noun. 1: the person who makes the final call, without
question or consideration of dissenting voices. In 2006, when the cry
to oust Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld had reached a deafening
pitch, Bush told the press he was The Decider.

Strategery. noun. 1: a vague secret plan behind an act of maneuvering.
2: the improvisational work of political consultants. Coined by
comedian Will Ferrell on Saturday Night Live to mock Bush's oratory
skills, it was later embraced by the White House to describe its own
workings.

Bush's poodle.noun. 1: a person who, out of misplaced loyalty to
another, damages himself. Not to be confused with teacher's pet.
Coined by the British press to describe former Prime Minister Tony
Blair and his unceasing defense of President Bush, who later offered
this defense: I've heard he's been called Bush's poodle. He's bigger
than that.

Heck of a job Brownie. exclamation. 1: ironic statement intended to
underline how much of a screw-up the subject has become. Originally
used, without that intent, by Bush, in reference to Federal Emergency
Management Agency head Michael Brown and his handling of Hurricane
Katrina. Likely to survive as an allusion to the Bush administration
itself.

cborre...@tribune.com



Re: [scifinoir2] English Language Freed!

2009-01-20 Thread KeithBJohnson
Well, after his performance at the swearing in today, maybe Chief Justice 
Roberts can fill in the gaff gap!


 -- Original message --
From: ravenadal ravena...@yahoo.com
 http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/chi-talk-bushismsjan20,0,639700.s
 tory
 
 George W. Bush's 'Bushisms' will be missed
 
 America expects mangled dialect to make full recovery
 
 By Christopher Borrelli | Tribune reporter
 
 January 20, 2009
 
 As of today, no longer will you watch your president improvise his way
 toward coherence. No longer will you listen with suspense while the
 leader of the free world manhandles Mother English into a balloon animal.
 
 Many agree this is a good thing. But isn't there something to be said
 for a president who is so empathetic that he understands how hard it
 is for you to put food on your family? Like Thomas Jefferson, who
 coined belittle, and John Adams, who created caucus, George W.
 Bush has also given us some unique terms and phrasings—some of which
 we don't want to see fade away:
 
 Misunderestimate. verb. 1: to fail to estimate full worth because of
 prior beliefs. Appears to date to Election Eve 2000. Different from
 underestimate or misunderstand in that the act is snidely
 presumptuous, not just a bad calculation, but one made with prejudice.
 
 The Decider. noun. 1: the person who makes the final call, without
 question or consideration of dissenting voices. In 2006, when the cry
 to oust Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld had reached a deafening
 pitch, Bush told the press he was The Decider.
 
 Strategery. noun. 1: a vague secret plan behind an act of maneuvering.
 2: the improvisational work of political consultants. Coined by
 comedian Will Ferrell on Saturday Night Live to mock Bush's oratory
 skills, it was later embraced by the White House to describe its own
 workings.
 
 Bush's poodle.noun. 1: a person who, out of misplaced loyalty to
 another, damages himself. Not to be confused with teacher's pet.
 Coined by the British press to describe former Prime Minister Tony
 Blair and his unceasing defense of President Bush, who later offered
 this defense: I've heard he's been called Bush's poodle. He's bigger
 than that.
 
 Heck of a job Brownie. exclamation. 1: ironic statement intended to
 underline how much of a screw-up the subject has become. Originally
 used, without that intent, by Bush, in reference to Federal Emergency
 Management Agency head Michael Brown and his handling of Hurricane
 Katrina. Likely to survive as an allusion to the Bush administration
 itself.
 
 cborre...@tribune.com
 
 


---BeginMessage---













http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/chi-talk-bushismsjan20,0,639700.story

George W. Bush's 'Bushisms' will be missed

America expects mangled dialect to make full recovery

By Christopher Borrelli | Tribune reporter

January 20, 2009

As of today, no longer will you watch your president improvise his way
toward coherence. No longer will you listen with suspense while the
leader of the free world manhandles Mother English into a balloon animal.

Many agree this is a good thing. But isn't there something to be said
for a president who is so empathetic that he understands how hard it
is for you to put food on your family? Like Thomas Jefferson, who
coined belittle, and John Adams, who created caucus, George W.
Bush has also given us some unique terms and phrasings—some of which
we don't want to see fade away:

Misunderestimate. verb. 1: to fail to estimate full worth because of
prior beliefs. Appears to date to Election Eve 2000. Different from
underestimate or misunderstand in that the act is snidely
presumptuous, not just a bad calculation, but one made with prejudice.

The Decider. noun. 1: the person who makes the final call, without
question or consideration of dissenting voices. In 2006, when the cry
to oust Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld had reached a deafening
pitch, Bush told the press he was The Decider.

Strategery. noun. 1: a vague secret plan behind an act of maneuvering.
2: the improvisational work of political consultants. Coined by
comedian Will Ferrell on Saturday Night Live to mock Bush's oratory
skills, it was later embraced by the White House to describe its own
workings.

Bush's poodle.noun. 1: a person who, out of misplaced loyalty to
another, damages himself. Not to be confused with teacher's pet.
Coined by the British press to describe former Prime Minister Tony
Blair and his unceasing defense of President Bush, who later offered
this defense: I've heard he's been called Bush's poodle. He's bigger
than that.

Heck of a job Brownie. exclamation. 1: ironic statement intended to
underline how much of a screw-up the subject has become. Originally
used, without that intent, by Bush, in reference to Federal Emergency
Management Agency head Michael Brown and his handling of Hurricane
Katrina. Likely to survive as an allusion to the Bush administration