Difference between revisions of "Laughs Under Lucricities"

From CWCki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m
(Redirected page to CWC-isms#L)
Tag: New redirect
 
(18 intermediate revisions by 16 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Quote| ... your bully of a boyfriend is the Original Author of the "Chris-chan" page that was put up there for the "LULZ", "Laughs Under Lucricities". Which I don't have to tell you is not only mean and cruel, the page is HORRIBLE|Chris-Chan, graciously translating his own disorientating [[Autism|spacker-speak]] for [[Kathleen]].}}
#Redirect [[CWC-isms#L]]
 
'''Laughs Under Lucricities''', also referred to as '''Laughs Under Lucrativeness''' and '''Laughs Under Lucridicites''', is a [[Wikipedia:backronym|backronym]] that [[Chris]] coined for the ubiquitous internet slang "[[Wiktionary:lulz|lulz]]." Broadly, Laughs Under Lucricities refers to any humor generated at Chris's expense and therefore completely reprehensible as far as the latter is concerned.
 
The term is a prime example of just how tenuous a grasp Chris has over the [[English language]], given that even if "lucricities" were a word, the phrase would still make little sense in isolation.<ref>[[Chris E-mails 2008#August]]</ref><ref>[[Kathleen Nicole Wallace]]</ref> Besides, it's inaccurate, as [[trolls]] don't actually make money on their schemes, unless they're lucky enough to get Cosimo di Medici to sponsor them. Nonetheless, given the context in which it was used (see above quote) and Chris's considerable history of suffering at the hands of the internet, the meaning of this garbled [[CWC-ism]] rings surprisingly clear.
 
A related term is "lucrid", a word Chris has used variously,<ref>[[CWC's Second Message]] and [[Mailbag 48]]</ref> despite that fact that it is nowhere to be found in any formal dictionary. It is seemingly a combination of "lurid" and "ludicrous" but falls short of being a portmanteau and is more like the result of a head-on collision of the English language. Its application suggests that Chris [[slow-in-the-minds|mistakenly]] uses it in place of the word "lewd," or more likely "lurid," or similar term of contempt.
 
==See also==
*[[Chris and English]]
 
==References==
<references/>
 
{{stub}}
 
{{CWC-isms}}
 
[[Category: CWC-isms]]

Latest revision as of 21:29, 24 January 2022

Redirect to: