Language & Grammar discussion
The L&G Kitchen Party
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What would be an up-to-date definition for subversive?
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Ah. This line:
This installation was created in 1999, and has been copied by teenagers and other subversives ever since.
I think an entire age group has been libeled.
This installation was created in 1999, and has been copied by teenagers and other subversives ever since.
I think an entire age group has been libeled.
Not all teenagers are subversive....some are more conservative than their parents! I always took subversive to mean undermining authority in any context....not just governmental....I have pupils who can be very subversive....they make the bullets and get someone else in class to fire the shots! Figuratively speaking here in NZ.....so far.....
Yes. There are "subversive" people of all age groups. It's true that teens are unique in that their brains are still undergoing dramatic change, but many adults have brain issues too.
This is the Age of Mental Illness, Food Allergies, Auto-Immune Disease, Autistic Spectrums, Behavioral Issues, Acronyms for Conditions, Global Warming, Chemical Pollutants, and Fear & Loathing, after all.
This is the Age of Mental Illness, Food Allergies, Auto-Immune Disease, Autistic Spectrums, Behavioral Issues, Acronyms for Conditions, Global Warming, Chemical Pollutants, and Fear & Loathing, after all.

Perhaps, but then again, many teens would take "subversive" as a compliment, wouldn't they?





Forget public surveillance cameras. I already assume my smartphone monitors me 24/7, with a continuous audio/video feed and GPS information, even when it is turned off. And underwater. Under boiling water. With the battery removed. And in a Faraday cage.

I think "subversion" is too gentle a word for it. I'd go with "evil incarnate."



http://www.mentalfloss.com/article/31...