beesmygod

“chuffed doesnt mean what you think it means”

it means exactly what i think it means its just some stupid word that literally has two definitions that mean the opposite thing

czarnoksieznik

what the hell

hesmybrother-hesadopted

This makes me really chuffed

winchesterbr0s

This post is quite egregious

cornflakepizza

Well I’m nonplussed by this whole post.

fuckyourwritinghabits

goddamnit.

221books

conservative-libertarian

dumbass-oikawa

all of you go to hell

diva-gonzo

And you wonder why i am boggled at times

whimmy-bam

These are called contronyms! A word that is its own opposite.

rubes-dragon

Why the fuck do these exist

operativesurprise

One theory is that the sarcastic use of the word became exceedingly prevalent and because another dictionary definition. 

mrs-transmuter

Are you telling me that we were such sarcastic shits it literally changed our language.

modmad

The adjective “pretty” comes from the Old English “prættig” (West Saxon), “pretti” (Kentish), “*prettig” (Mercian) which meant “cunning, skillful, artful, wily, astute.” Basically pretty was used to mean someone or something clever but it was a bad thing. In the change from Old English to Middle English, “pretty” by 1400 had come to mean “manly, gallant,” and then it shifted to “attractive, skillfully made,” and then to “fine,” and then by the mid-fifteenth century came to mean “beautiful in a slight way.”

In a similar fashion, the noun “niceness” meant “folly, foolish behaviour” in the 1520s, by the 1670s it had come to mean “exactness” and finally, by 1809, “pleasantness.” This is an example of amelioration, and things like when ‘bad’ was used to mean ‘good’ in the 80′s and ‘wicked’ meaning ‘excellent’ in the 90′s are the same thing (amelioration being where the meaning gets better, the opposite is pejoration where the meaning becomes worse); so yeah, this shit happens all the time and it’s confusing as heck but also kind of great.