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Just for Fun > Where Do We All Live? (With Map Link)

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message 101: by Garrett (new)

Garrett Smith (garrettsmith) | 246 comments So, somewhere in Google Land, two search word specialists (read: advertising grunts)are staring at one another with puzzled looks wondering why the word 'borked' is suddenly trending.


message 102: by Michele (new)

Michele | 144 comments A tangential question: if there were an apocalypse, where would you like to be living?


message 103: by Cheryl (new)

Cheryl (cherylllr) Iowa? I've not thought about it, but near food and far from targets?


message 104: by Michele (new)

Michele | 144 comments Cheryl in CC NV wrote: "Iowa? I've not thought about it, but near food and far from targets?"

Well, there's Offutt Air Force Base. I guess it depends on the type of apocalypse :)


message 105: by Glynn (new)

Glynn | 342 comments Lincoln wrote: "Nice use of the word "borked"....Before you go and google the term, who knows their history? Extra credit for those outside of the United States. "

I live in the United States but have never heard the word "borked" until now! Is it really a word?


message 106: by Glynn (new)

Glynn | 342 comments Amy wrote: "And that's probably far more information than you wanted to know. ;)
..."


Good information. I like information! :)


message 107: by Michele (last edited Aug 23, 2014 08:14PM) (new)

Michele | 144 comments Glynn wrote: "I live in the United States but have never heard the word "borked" until now! Is it really a word?"

Well, it is now :) One meaning comes from politics: to obstruct someone from public office, as in what happened to Robert Bork.

The other meaning comes from the online world as a common typo for "broke" (reversing the R and O). As in, "My car is borked." Similarly, you often see 'teh' instead of 'the' or 'ebil' for 'evil' (b is next to v on the keyboard).

So for example, "Extremists are teh ebil."


message 108: by C.J. (new)

C.J. Moseley (cjmoseley) | 15 comments Borked in computing comes from the Swedish Chef muppet, and technically it doesn't mean broken, but rather messed up by the person supposed to be maintaining it. On old Linux systems you could send the output of any program to be translated into Swedish Chef speech, and it was turned into the Chef's pseudo-English. This output was described as borked way back in 1992 when I was studying for my physics degree.
I had no idea about the Robert H Bork use, which seems weirdly unrelated.


message 109: by Michele (new)

Michele | 144 comments C.J. wrote: "Borked in computing comes from the Swedish Chef muppet, and technically it doesn't mean broken, but rather messed up by the person supposed to be maintaining it..."

ROFL!! Oh, that's priceless XD I should have known: "Bork! Bork! Bork!"


message 110: by Amy, Queen of Time (new)

Amy | 2208 comments Mod
Yes, I always think of the Swedish Chef muppet when I say the word "bork". :-)


message 111: by Lincoln, Temporal Jester (new)

Lincoln | 1290 comments Mod
Michele wrote: "Glynn wrote: "I live in the United States but have never heard the word "borked" until now! Is it really a word?"

Well, it is now :) One meaning comes from politics: to obstruct someone from publ..."


Michelle,

I got my degree in political science and know the Robert Bork story...that is the story I was wondering if anyone knew when I posed my bork question. Congratulations on being the winner...although the other answers are very interesting as well.


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