[Deleted]
what does "gash" here means? —they're breaking camp. —frightened little gashes. I know it kind of points someone coward,but I can't even find the exact meaning of gash from wikipedia,I guess this word maybe is a local slang,right? hi,@fdmaxey,here the text. 209 00:18:30,664 --> 00:18:31,864 They're breaking camp. 210 00:18:31,932 --> 00:18:33,299 Frightened little gashes, 211 00:18:33,367 --> 00:18:37,170 Running away with their cocks between their cheeks. 212 00:18:37,237 --> 00:18:38,171 Retreat would take them beyond 213 00:18:38,238 --> 00:18:40,206 the mountains to the north. 214 00:18:40,274 --> 00:18:42,041 Their torches bear west. 215 00:18:42,109 --> 00:18:43,643 West? 216 00:18:43,711 --> 00:18:45,878 They're swinging around to attack the villages below the pass. 217 00:18:48,148 --> 00:18:50,383 Our villages. 218 00:18:50,451 --> 00:18:52,185 Slippery little cunts.@Alex,no,they are not the gurls...LOL they are Getas.
2. Apr. 2010 14:45
Antworten · 4
2
Very simply, gash means girls here. Calling them scared little girls. Read on for explanation... Gash is a VERY old, antiquated slang word for female genitalia, because it looks like a gash from a wound. I would even say it's archaic (no longer used). It actually came to mean girls because, like f###ers, it would commonly be used to refer to wimps, to emasculate. So scared f###ers is the modern day version of scared gashes. Cunts, used at the end, is the same thing: female genitalia used to emasculate them, calling them girls (or people with cunts).
2. April 2010
1
It's most likely a vulgar British slang.The frightened ones were the girls?
2. April 2010
1
I'd have to know the context. However, "gash" is a long cut. You would get a gash from a knife or something sharp, like a stone. If they are talking about a number of small cuts, this might be very frightening. Do you have the complete text?
2. April 2010
In this case, 'gashes' means girls, that is they were running away like frightened girls. Have a look at www.urbandictionary.com. Both Alexs are correct.
3. April 2010
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