This example is very different than 2 people in a relationship saying things during sex and thinking it won't ever come up outside of sex. Uh huh and we never see where anyone has said shit in relationships and it has come back to get them later on.
Well the sources I've seen say the word arised from slave masters raping slaves and from boys being forced to fuck their mothers Links please
Because TDK is just a never-ending stream of verbal diarrhea, and it's tough to keep up. His 'Tommy Hilfiger is a racist ' was a doozy
I'd be really interested in reading what these specific boundaries are. I can't imagine a man ever wanting his woman to call him that under any circumstances.
He's got none. It's straight internet BS. The word FUCK wasn't even invented back then. It's in zero literature. Furthermore, l had read the opposite of TDK..that It's what slaves CALLED the masters who had sex with (raped) their mothers. So really now. You read up on it and you will find it's a word invented this century, within the Black culture, and it made its way to white culture. So no, it's not white men calling slaves that centuries ago. He never thinks things out...TDK just parrots BS he finds.
Well I don't know what his lesson on Mother Fucker was. But here's what I found on the history of it (rather long and boring) http://english.stackexchange.com/qu...the-origin-and-history-of-the-word-motherf-er
Further... "Though some folk etymologies suggest that the term was based on the experience of the African-American slave, there’s no hard evidence for this, either. According to this theory, the term was used to refer to “White slavemasters … who raped your mother in order to break the Black family down, physically and psychologically,” and also served “as a means to avoid calling your slavemaster your ‘father.’ ” However, according to Jesse Sheidlower, editor at large of the Oxford English Dictionary and author of The F-Word, “any kind of folk etymological explanation of motherfucker or motherfucking is not true” and “there’s no evidence of the term from slavery times and nothing to suggest that it ever was used in reference to slave masters.” While the first recorded instance of the word happens to be from an African-American, Sheidlower says “there's evidence of its use, even at early times, from whites as well.”