Updated by anonymous
Posted under Tag Alias and Implication Suggestions
I've never heard anyone use it in such way. Pissed means angry...or drunk, if you're British. And as you can see from the tagged images, that's not how it is used here.
Good alias, should be combined.
Updated by anonymous
Conker said:
Pissed does not mean angry, it has to do with going to the bathroom on something or someone else
What dictionary do you use, seriously? You can piss on something, but being pissed does not mean you're actually pissing on someone/thing, it means you're mad.
Updated by anonymous
Rocket_Corgi said:
What dictionary do you use, seriously? You can piss on something, but being pissed does not mean you're actually pissing on someone/thing, it means you're mad.
Piss(es) or Pissed may refer to:
Urine, a sterile, liquid by-product of the body that is secreted by the kidneys and excreted through the urethra
Urination, the ejection of urine to the outside of the body
Updated by anonymous
Conker said:
Piss(es) or Pissed may refer to:Urine, a sterile, liquid by-product of the body that is secreted by the kidneys and excreted through the urethra
Urination, the ejection of urine to the outside of the body
And you got that from...where? We're not talking about piss, and we're not talking about pissing, we're talking about pissed. We're all well aware what the word piss and pissing mean, but they have nothing to do with pissed.
To BE pissed means that you're angry; you're using it as a verb, in that 'I pissed on something', which is not what we're talking about here nor is it how it's being used in images (nor could it, as it really doesn't fit with TWYS).
Updated by anonymous
Rocket_Corgi said:
And you got that from...where? We're not talking about piss, and we're not talking about pissing, we're talking about pissed. We're all well aware what the word piss and pissing mean, but they have nothing to do with pissed.
A dictionary, its a past term.
Updated by anonymous
Conker said:
A dictionary, its a past term.
Nothing here is tagged with past terms.
Updated by anonymous
Seven_Twenty said:
Nothing here is tagged with past terms.
If there is a image of someone that has piss on them, and someone walking away, the pissed tag would be called for.
Updated by anonymous
Conker said:
If there is a image of someone that has piss on them, and someone walking away, the pissed tag would be called for.
No it wouldn't, that doesn't fit in with TWYS at all. Unless the character is physically getting pissed on (which, coincidentally, is covered with the watersports tag, you wouldn't tag it with pissed.
And regardless, if you just see two people in an image, and one has piss on them, that doesn't mean the second character in an image did it. Come on man, this is pretty simply stuff here.
Updated by anonymous
http://oxforddictionaries.com/definition/english/pissed
Definition of pissed
adjective
vulgar slang
1 (also pissed up) British drunk.
2 (pissed off) (North American also pissed) very annoyed.
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/pissed
pissed (pst)
adj. Vulgar Slang
1. Extremely irritated or angry. Often used with off.
2. Chiefly British Intoxicated; drunk.
pissed [pɪst]
adj
1. Brit, Austral, and NZ slang intoxicated; drunk
2. US slang annoyed, irritated, or disappointed
pissed (pɪst)
adj. Slang: Usu. Vulgar.
1. angry or annoyed.
2. drunk.
Who would have thought?
Also, words with more than one meaning, such a unthinkable thing.
Updated by anonymous
Rocket_Corgi said:
if you just see two people in an image, and one has piss on them, that doesn't mean the second character in an image did it.
If there is piss leaking from a guys cock, walking away from a 2nd char covered in piss, it doesnt take sherlock holmes to figure out who did it or what happened.
Updated by anonymous
Conker said:
If there is piss leaking from a guys cock, walking away from a 2nd char covered in piss, it doesnt take sherlock holmes to figure out who did it or what happened.
It still wouldn't get tagged with pissed, it'd get tagged with watersports.
Updated by anonymous
Done.
Updated by anonymous