version

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"And so he remains, indefinitely and emphatically, a small-souled bugman."
 

luka

Well-known member
i think most of these internet analyses of modern humanity are correct but they are dishonest in that they dont implicate themselves. they pretend they are not also bugmen
 

luka

Well-known member

buggery (n.)​

mid-14c., "heresy," from Old French bougrerie, from bougre "heretic" (see bugger (n.)). Later (1510s) "unnatural intercourse" with man or beast, "carnalis copula contra Naturam, & hoc vel per confusionem Specierum;" from bugger (n.) + -y (4).

bugger (n.)​

"sodomite," 1550s, earlier "heretic" (mid-14c.), from Medieval Latin Bulgarus "a Bulgarian" (see Bulgaria), so called from bigoted notions of the sex lives of Eastern Orthodox Christians or of the sect of heretics* that was prominent there 11c. Compare Old French bougre "Bulgarian," also "heretic; sodomite."



Softened secondary sense of "fellow, chap," is in British English "low language" [OED] from mid-19c. Meaning "something unpleasant, a nuisance" is from 1936. Related: Buggerly.



* The religious heretics in question were the Bogomils, whose name is a Slavic compound meaning "dear to God" (compare Russian bog "god") and might be a translation of Greek theophilos.
 

catalog

Well-known member
Is it that they believe themselves to have transcended it. They've come through. I was once a bugman.

Buum is very interest ng cos he was literally 8n a cult.
 

catalog

Well-known member
Wonder if there's any connection to bug

buggery (n.)​

mid-14c., "heresy," from Old French bougrerie, from bougre "heretic" (see bugger (n.)). Later (1510s) "unnatural intercourse" with man or beast, "carnalis copula contra Naturam, & hoc vel per confusionem Specierum;" from bugger (n.) + -y (4).

bugger (n.)​

"sodomite," 1550s, earlier "heretic" (mid-14c.), from Medieval Latin Bulgarus "a Bulgarian" (see Bulgaria), so called from bigoted notions of the sex lives of Eastern Orthodox Christians or of the sect of heretics* that was prominent there 11c. Compare Old French bougre "Bulgarian," also "heretic; sodomite."



Softened secondary sense of "fellow, chap," is in British English "low language" [OED] from mid-19c. Meaning "something unpleasant, a nuisance" is from 1936. Related: Buggerly.



* The religious heretics in question were the Bogomils, whose name is a Slavic compound meaning "dear to God" (compare Russian bog "god") and might be a translation of Greek theophilos.
 

luka

Well-known member
Is it that they believe themselves to have transcended it. They've come through. I was once a bugman.

Buum is very interest ng cos he was literally 8n a cult.
no, they think they are a superior breed. they think they have souls and an interior life, and of course they dont. nobody has those things now.
 
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