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Meaning of "Git" *LINK*
In Response To: Sad Gits ()


I wasn't sure what the word "git" means, so here is the entry from the English-to-American Dictionary, linked below.

  • git n.

    Tricky one to define. What it doesn't mean is what The Waltons meant when they said it (as in "git outta here, John-Boy"). Git is technically an insult but has a twinge of jealousy to it. You'd call someone a git if they'd won the Readers' Digest Prize Draw, outsmarted you in a battle of wits or been named in Bill Gates' Last Will and Testament because of a spelling mistake. Like sod, it has a friendly tone to it. I'm told it derives from Arabic, where it describes a pregnant female camel, of all things. I'm also told that it is a contraction of the word "illegitimate" - you be the judge.


OK . . . thanks to "tester123" for the posting . . . it's always fun to learn interesting new words.

Jeff

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

: What a bunch of sad gits you all are. Get a
: life!!

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