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Un-freaking-believable?
I saw such phrase like "That's un-freaking believable." in the film. When is this phrase used?
10 de feb. de 2011 18:21
Respuestas · 4
2
Now you know what it means , don't go saying it in formal situations. You will come across as an uneducated person.
10 de febrero de 2011
2
It's adding child equivalent of a swearword into the middle of a word to put more emphasis on the whole (original) word.
Sometimes instead of "freaking", they'd say "fucking"...especially if the character were older and more prone to swearing.
It's usually to put more emphasis on the word that they're putting "freaking" into.
10 de febrero de 2011
1
lololololol. When the speaker is very angry or shocked, not believing what happaned or is going on.
I just found it very cute: Probably a he huh? He uses another f word instead of that f, to express his extremely strong shocked feeling that normally requires that f to work with the structure, awkward like saying "un-really-believable", see what I mean? To be as polite as 'reakin', you can also say 'riggin', another f bomb.
Theoretically it'll be all tenable to put words in the order: Prefix - adverb - adjective (usually the "-ble" ones) And it looks like the one you brought up is the most popular one. Same as: abverb prefix-adj It's f...ing unbelievable...
10 de febrero de 2011
Lol I use freakin, I feel I am being kinder to those soft of heart; rather than dropping the F-bomb
10 de febrero de 2011
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