Blue Plastic August 5, 2014 Share August 5, 2014 How about "beginningly?" Heard that in an episode today. As in: Judge Judy: What date did you sign the lease on the apartment? Clueless Litigant: Beginningly, we signed the lease on August 24, 2013..." 6 Link to comment
6 MeowMeowBeenz August 5, 2014 Share August 5, 2014 I thought I heard "beginningly" but our DVR took a crap so I couldn't rewind...so glad you saved the moment for posterity! Link to comment
teebax October 14, 2014 Share October 14, 2014 I have to share this. I was getting new tires today, so I was waiting for my car to be finished. There was a lady talking loudly on her cell phone. She also had two kids who were screaming and running all over the place - big surprise. Anyway, she was complaining about something the tire guys did. And she said, "They had tooken them off, and they were all messed up." That, my friends, is the first time I've ever heard anyone say "tooken" outside of a TV court show. 4 Link to comment
QuelleC October 14, 2014 Share October 14, 2014 I had a coworker who said "my kidses" for plural and possessive use. Recently I saw an internet post using that word too. 1 Link to comment
DoctorK October 15, 2014 Share October 15, 2014 The end of western civilisation as we know it. It has been a pretty good run for about 3,000 years. 1 Link to comment
DebbieW October 15, 2014 Share October 15, 2014 (edited) My soul hurts. I'm a special education teacher. I have a 3rd grade student (that I got when he was in 1st grade) whose only real disability is that he's an only child being raised by grandparents who think he shits glitter and rainbows. He's constantly saying things like "I goed to the store." and "We runned on the playground." I spent the first two years modeling and correcting. Now I act like I can't understand what he's saying and he manages to figure out the proper way to say it. Aforementioned grandparents think this is oh so adorable (and it probably was when he was 4) that I'm fighting an uphill battle. I'm wondering if I'll see him/them on JJ someday. Edited October 15, 2014 by DebbieW 5 Link to comment
AngelaHunter November 10, 2014 Share November 10, 2014 What about "abruised?" Must be the short way of saying she was "Abused" and "Bruised". If you need to think of an easier way to say it, it might be time to ditch whatever Loverboy inspired it. Link to comment
Milz November 10, 2014 Share November 10, 2014 (edited) I think it was 2 weeks ago on a repeat, someone used the term "escape goat" during the halterview. As in "she wanted an escape goat". Edited November 10, 2014 by Milz 1 Link to comment
JBC344 November 14, 2014 Share November 14, 2014 (edited) I think it was 2 weeks ago on a repeat, someone used the term "escape goat" during the halterview. As in "she wanted an escape goat". Om my god. I'm sorry but this is hilarious. Reminds me of that friends episode where Joey thought the term "Moot point" was "Moo point" as in "moo" the sound a cow makes so the point is irrelevant. Edited November 14, 2014 by JBC344 2 Link to comment
Quof November 14, 2014 Share November 14, 2014 Hey, I say Moo Point all the time. Although I've never dared write it in a brief or say it to a judge. Link to comment
ItsHelloPattiagain November 14, 2014 Share November 14, 2014 My grown daughters and I also say "Moo Point". The difference is in knowing the difference but saying it for comic relief. 1 Link to comment
Sarcastico November 20, 2014 Share November 20, 2014 Remember the litigant a few years ago who bought a $600 smartphone because she "like-ded" it? This "word," the past tense of like, can now be heard routinely on Maury Povich. Link to comment
AngelaHunter November 20, 2014 Share November 20, 2014 This "word," the past tense of like, can now be heard routinely on Maury Povich. I don't watch Maury, but I weep for the demise of the English language. 1 Link to comment
DebbieW November 22, 2014 Share November 22, 2014 I teach 3rd grade students with learning disabilities and one of my boys does this because he's sounding out the words. It's adorable when he does it (although we're working on not doing it). These dumbasses, not so much. 1 Link to comment
Milz November 25, 2014 Share November 25, 2014 A new definition for "escape goat". Used in Kitten Mom v. Kitten Mom, plaintiff sues defendant for vet bills she accrued while caring for a stray cat. Defendant claims Plaintiff stole the cat and countersued for lost wages. JJ established that Plaintiff was a better Kitten mom getting shots for kitten, getting kitten's claws trimmed monthly, etc. than Defendant, but the Kitten was the Defendant's pet. JJ found for the Plaintiff. During Plaintiff's testimony, she said the kitten was an "escape goat" and left the home while a door was open. Escape Goat 1. noun: a scapegoat; a person or thing that is made to bear the blame of others. 2. noun: a escape artist; a prison inmate with the reputation of being able to take unauthorized leave. 3 Link to comment
Oinky Boinky November 25, 2014 Share November 25, 2014 I mentioned this on the main JJ page. This is not the first occurrence of 'escape goat' on JJ In the older case I believe the litigant said 'escape goat' in the true sense of being a scape goat but just not knowing what the correct word was- she knew the meaning but not the words. The kitten litigant was wrong in every sense. And this reminds me of daffy duck teachers where one of them used the 'allowed speaker' to call out the other. Why did she do that? Obviously because it was allowed. It boggles when teachers don't know their own language. 1 Link to comment
Oinky Boinky November 26, 2014 Share November 26, 2014 Quite often the closed captioning is wrong. Often it is laughably wrong. I am not sure who does the closed captioning but I know the cc on The People's Court is very funny. I still have the kitten ep so I will listen to it again. Link to comment
SnarkyTart November 30, 2014 Share November 30, 2014 Kitten lady definitely said escape goat, with the conext that it meant the kitten was good at escaping. 1 Link to comment
6 MeowMeowBeenz December 17, 2014 Share December 17, 2014 Can't believe no one has yet posted "aware", used thusly: Your Honor, it wasn't my fault, she did not aware me of the situation. 5 Link to comment
Milz January 13, 2015 Share January 13, 2015 I heard this on a repeat case: Drunken mom suing drunken daughter for fishing poles and other assorted property left at drunken daughter's home after drunken Mom was thrown out. Drunken daughter countersued for damages caused by drunken mom's sober chihuahuas. Drunken daughter asked drunken mom to move in to watch her children. But threw mom out after discussing mom's flirtatious behavior towards daughter's boyfriend. the discussion took place at a bar. "uncomfortabilize" verb. to make uncomfortable Usage: "She uncomfortabilized me because she was always touching me and coming onto me". 1 Link to comment
QuinnM January 13, 2015 Share January 13, 2015 I myself never walk anymore. I never do anything. I only proceed to the store or proceed to call on the phone. I find it carries more weight. 10 Link to comment
AngelaHunter January 13, 2015 Share January 13, 2015 I've noticed a shocking increase in the use of the non-word "tooken." 5 Link to comment
Sarcastico January 14, 2015 Share January 14, 2015 I've been noticing that people are forgetting comparative adjectives and how to use them: old, older, oldest; short, shorter, shortest; late, later, latest. I recently heard someone on this show say, "more big" rather than "bigger." Can't remember the case or the contestant. 2 Link to comment
Quof January 14, 2015 Share January 14, 2015 "contestant" Hee! You mean litigant. Although I understand how they could be viewed as contestants on a game show. 3 Link to comment
DoctorK January 15, 2015 Share January 15, 2015 I've been noticing that people are forgetting comparative adjectives and how to use them: What I keep seeing is the inability to use the most basic tenses - present, future, past. This is not getting into some of the oddball tenses in English, but these people can' even handle the basic three tenses. They are functionally illiterate in simple basic English but have a huge sense of entitlement. 1 Link to comment
Intocats January 16, 2015 Share January 16, 2015 (edited) I myself never walk anymore. I never do anything. I only proceed to the store or proceed to call on the phone. I find it carries more weight. "Your Honor, I then proceeded to my vee-hickle which was currently parked-ed outside the bar." Edited January 16, 2015 by Intocats 4 Link to comment
Toaster Strudel January 27, 2015 Share January 27, 2015 MISUNFORTUNATE - Being unfortunate, but incorrectly. If you're going to be unfortunate, you better do it right; if you don't, you're misunfortunate. 4 Link to comment
bref January 27, 2015 Share January 27, 2015 I was just coming here to post about Bill Murray's doppelganger and his made-up word. But misunfortunately, Toaster beat me to it! Link to comment
bref January 28, 2015 Share January 28, 2015 Today's "use of a real word incorrectly" award goes to the fella who hauls "garbage, trash, refuge". Extra points for (attempted) redundancy! 3 Link to comment
Oinky Boinky January 29, 2015 Share January 29, 2015 Today's "use of a real word incorrectly" award goes to the fella who hauls "garbage, trash, refuge". Extra points for (attempted) redundancy! He was successfully redundant as soon as he followed garbage with trash. He was looking for refuge after he hit and run. Maybe refuge was a Freudian slip, You know a Freudian slip is when you say one thing but mean your mother. 4 Link to comment
Oinky Boinky February 3, 2015 Share February 3, 2015 I have been giggling about Juloon all day long. All of todays snark has been giving me giggle fits. 1 Link to comment
SandyToes December 11, 2015 Share December 11, 2015 teebax reports "begrade" is a new word for us! Yea for expanding our vocabulary. Link to comment
teebax December 12, 2015 Share December 12, 2015 This is a place to post the eloquent language of Judge Judy litigants. Link to comment
AngelaHunter December 12, 2015 Share December 12, 2015 (edited) Have you heard some verbal words that left you scratching your head? Look them up here and add your own! Because the English language is flexible and ever-changing, particularly in trailer parks… Brought to you by the makers of the Judge Judy Drinking Game. Created by someone on TwoP whose name eludes me again. Additions by me. I'm sorry but I cannot remember names. Ever. Abruised: adjective; bruised during the course of physical abuse. "My baby daddy beat on me and now I'm abruised." A'ight: adjective; doing well, okay. "I do a little of this and that and I do a'ight, your honah." Argacity: noun; The quality of being audacious. "My roommate had the argacity to sleep with my baby daddy so I bleached her clothes." Axe: verb; Request. "He axed me to bail him out of jail." Baby Daddy: noun; a man who randomly fathers children but does not support them. "I don't get no child support from my baby daddy." Beaucoodles: adj, Fr; A semi-French version of many; multiples. "See? I have beaucoodles of emails that troll sent me!" Bickerment: verb; to have a disagreement. "We just had a bickerment over the rent payment, your honor." Bicker-backer: verb; to bicker back and forth. "We continued to bicker-backer until she finally got me the cell phone." Blogus: adjective; Not genuine. Fake. "Her claims that I injured her are blogus." Borrow: verb; to have loaned someone something. "I was broke, so she borrowed me $200 to pay my bail." Boughten: verb; to have purchased something. "He boughten me the engagement ring, so it's mine to keep!" Broughten: verb; past participle of bring. "I had broughten the ring to the pawn shop." Coercion: noun; A request to pay back money you were loaned. Confruntated: verb; as in "I don't put up with being confruntated'" (confronted, if you couldn't tell by the context). Conversate: verb; to have a conversation. "After we conversated, she finally got me a cell phone". Despairing: transitive verb; to speak slightingly about. "I never made no despairing remarks about my ex." Disregard: transitive verb; To dispose of or discard. "The cell phone was busted so I disregarded it." Entitle: transitive verb; Obligated. "I didn't feel entitled to pay the child support, your honor." Exhilarator: noun; A control on a car used to increase speed. "He punched me and I accidentally hit the exhilarator instead of the brake." Explicited: adj; risque. "He posted those explicited photos of me on his MySpace page." Exuberant: adj; Large amount. "He axed me to co-sign for his car since he knew I had an exhuberant amount of credit." Fraudulate: verb; to commit a fraud, to cheat someone. "He fraudulated me out of my money!" Furiation: adj; to be mad. "When I realized my boyfriend would never pay back the money, I had a furiation." Furnitured: adj; when an apartment or home is furnished. "He told me the place was furnitured!" Gaven: verb; to have given. "She had gaven me the credit card." Had went: verb; Went. "Me and him had went to the pawn shop so I could get back my ring that I previously pawnded." Hurted: transitional verb(?); Was painful. "She bit my pinky off during the physical altercation and it really hurted." Insignificant other: noun; a domestic partner; someone with whom a person has a romantic relationship. "I was presently staying with my insignificant other at that time." Like-ded: verb; Was fond of. "I bought that $300 cellphone with my SSI because I like-ded it." Making amendments: verb; to make up; bury the hatchet. "They used to argue some but then they made amendments and were getting along okay." Non-transfundable: noun; A purchase that can be neither transferred to another party nor refunded. "Them airline tickets was non-transfundable!" Numerous of times. adj; phrase Many. "He called me numerous of times and harassed me." Noyum: Adj; A smooth floor covering used esp. in kitchens and bathrooms. "He threw a lamp at my head and it fell and ripped the noyum." Over-tempered: adjective; Very angry. "I beat her up in the parking lot cause she had a frickin' nerve sleeping with my boyfriend and I got over-tempered." Pacific: adjective; Particular. "Your honor, he said he wanted that pacific cell phone." Pawnded: verb, past tense; when one has pawned an item. After I pawnded the engagement ring, I paid my rent. Physical Altercation: noun; Skanks beating the crap out of each other over a worthless man. "We had a physical altercation and she bust me in my lip." (A phrase pronounced correctly but that has only one meaning on JJ so I included it.) Presently: adverb; in the past. "I was presently being evicted at that time." Repeative: adj; recurrent. "Her boyfriend is a repeative customer." Revengual: adj; to take revenge. "After we had splitten up, he took revengual on me and keyed my car." Revengeful: adj, variant of revengual. "She only keyed my car because she was revengeful." Seen: verb, past tense; to have seen. "I seen my boyfriend out with her, so I keyed his car." Spendy: noun; expensive. "He axed me to buy him a new cell phone and it was spendy." Splitten: adj; when a couple has broken up. After we had splitten up, he still owed me for rent. Stolded: verb; past participle of steal. "I don't have it no more cuz my brudder stolded it." Supposably: adverb; purportedly. "Supposably he paid the cell phone bill with the money I borrowed him." Squashed their beef: Verb; Resolved an argument. "Him and me squashed our beef over me totaling his car." Texes: noun; More than one text. "He sent me them explicited texes!" Tooken: verb, past tense; to have taken. I woke up to see he had tooken the keys and trashed my car. Verbal words: noun; argument. "Him and me had verbal words." Verbital agreement: noun; oral contract. "Her and me had a verbital agreement." Vindiction: noun; syn. anger "She left me so I went over and shot her dog out of pure vindiction." Honorable Mention: RIGORMORTIS STEW: noun; A meal consisting of non-fresh roadkill, prepared by "Deliverance" cast clones. "I never et none of that rigormortis stew!" Edited December 15, 2015 by AngelaHunter 13 Link to comment
One Tough Cookie December 12, 2015 Share December 12, 2015 We can close the internet today. Nothing else will beat this. 4 Link to comment
Setra December 15, 2015 Share December 15, 2015 Have you heard some verbal words that left you scratching your head? Look them up here and add your own! Because the English language is flexible and ever-changing, particularly in trailer parks… Brought to you by the makers of the Judge Judy Drinking Game. Created by someone on TwoP whose name eludes me again. Additions by me. I'm sorry but I cannot remember names. Ever. Abruised: adjective; bruised during the course of physical abuse. "My baby daddy beat on me and now I'm abruised." A'ight: adjective; doing well, okay. "I do a little of this and that and I do a'ight, your honah." Argacity: noun; The quality of being audacious. "My roommate had the argacity to sleep with my baby daddy so I bleached her clothes." Axe: verb; Request. "He axed me to bail him out of jail." Baby Daddy: noun; a man who randomly fathers children but does not support them. "I don't get no child support from my baby daddy." Beaucoodles: adj, Fr; A semi-French version of many; multiples. "See? I have beaucoodles of emails that troll sent me!" Bickerment: verb; to have a disagreement. "We just had a bickerment over the rent payment, your honor." Bicker-backer: verb; to bicker back and forth. "We continued to bicker-backer until she finally got me the cell phone." Blogus: adjective; Not genuine. Fake. "Her claims that I injured her are blogus." Borrow: verb; to have loaned someone something. "I was broke, so she borrowed me $200 to pay my bail." Boughten: verb; to have purchased something. "He boughten me the engagement ring, so it's mine to keep!" Coercion: noun; A request to pay back money you were loaned. Confruntated: verb; as in "I don't put up with being confruntated'" (confronted, if you couldn't tell by the context). Conversate: verb; to have a conversation. "After we conversated, she finally got me a cell phone". Despairing: transitive verb; to speak slightingly about. "I never made no despairing remarks about my ex." Disregard: transitive verb; To dispose of or discard. "The cell phone was busted so I disregarded it." Entitle: transitive verb; Obligated. "I didn't feel entitled to pay the child support, your honor." Exhilarator: noun; A control on a car used to increase speed. "He punched me and I accidentally hit the exhilarator instead of the brake." Explicited: adj; risque. "He posted those explicited photos of me on his MySpace page." Exuberant: adj; Large amount. "He axed me to co-sign for his car since he knew I had an exhuberant amount of credit." Fraudulate: verb; to commit a fraud, to cheat someone. "He fraudulated me out of my money!" Furiation: adj; to be mad. "When I realized my boyfriend would never pay back the money, I had a furiation." Furnitured: adj; when an apartment or home is furnished. "He told me the place was furnitured!" Gaven: verb; to have given. "She had gaven me the credit card." Had went: verb; Went. "Me and him had went to the pawn shop so I could get back my ring that I previously pawnded." Hurted: transitional verb(?); Was painful. "She bit my pinky off during the physical altercation and it really hurted." Like-ded: verb; Was fond of. "I bought that $300 cellphone with my SSI because I like-ded it." Making amendments: verb; to make up; bury the hatchet. "They used to argue some but then they made amendments and were getting along okay." Non-transfundable: noun; A purchase that can be neither transferred to another party nor refunded. "Them airline tickets was non-transfundable!" Numerous of times. adj; phrase Many. "He called me numerous of times and harassed me." Noyum: Adj; A smooth floor covering used esp. in kitchens and bathrooms. "He threw a lamp at my head and it fell and ripped the noyum." Over-tempered: adjective; Very angry. "I beat her up in the parking lot cause she had a frickin' nerve sleeping with my boyfriend and I got over-tempered." Pacific: adjective; Particular. "Your honor, he said he wanted that pacific cell phone." Pawnded: verb, past tense; when one has pawned an item. After I pawnded the engagement ring, I paid my rent. Physical Altercation: noun; Skanks beating the crap out of each other over a worthless man. "We had a physical altercation and she bust me in my lip." (A phrase pronounced correctly but that has only one meaning on JJ so I included it.) Presently: adverb; in the past. "I was presently being evicted at that time." Repeative: adj; recurrent. "Her boyfriend is a repeative customer." Revengual: adj; to take revenge. "After we had splitten up, he took revengual on me and keyed my car." Revengeful: adj, variant of revengual. "She only keyed my car because she was revengeful." Seen: verb, past tense; to have seen. "I seen my boyfriend out with her, so I keyed his car." Spendy: noun; expensive. "He axed me to buy him a new cell phone and it was spendy." Splitten: adj; when a couple has broken up. After we had splitten up, he still owed me for rent. Supposably: adverb; purportedly. "Supposably he paid the cell phone bill with the money I borrowed him." Squashed their beef: Verb; Resolved an argument. "Him and me squashed our beef over me totaling his car." Texes: noun; More than one text. "He sent me them explicited texes!" Tooken: verb, past tense; to have taken. I woke up to see he had tooken the keys and trashed my car. Verbal words: noun; argument. "Him and me had verbal words." Verbital agreement: noun; oral contract. "Her and me had a verbital agreement." Vindiction: noun; syn. anger "She left me so I went over and shot her dog out of pure vindiction." Honorable Mention: RIGORMORTIS STEW: noun; A meal consisting of non-fresh roadkill, prepared by "Deliverance" cast clones. "I never et none of that rigormortis stew!" May I respectfullly add 'stolded'? I don't have it no more cuz my brudder stolded it. 3 Link to comment
teebax December 15, 2015 Share December 15, 2015 I would add " broughten" as well. Great list! 2 Link to comment
Milz December 15, 2015 Share December 15, 2015 "Insufficient other" : a significant other who is insufficient. 2 Link to comment
AuntiePam December 15, 2015 Share December 15, 2015 Heard this one today: "Recompensate" -- a combo of "recompense" and "compensate", as in "I sued in order to recompensate myself". 1 Link to comment
AngelaHunter December 20, 2015 Share December 20, 2015 Added "Insignificant other" and "stolded" but seems I can no longer edit my dictionary.:( Link to comment
wallysmommy December 20, 2015 Share December 20, 2015 I would add ammonia as in noun. A lung infection. "She left the window open and my sister caught ammonia." Except this was on People's Court, I do believe. 1 Link to comment
AngelaHunter December 21, 2015 Share December 21, 2015 "She left the window open and my sister caught ammonia." Except this was on People's Court, I do believe. No worries! On JJ we had "limonia". Maybe a different kind of lung infection... ? Link to comment
SandyToes December 21, 2015 Share December 21, 2015 Perhaps "limonia" is a lung infection resulting from eating too much citrus? Or cured by? Thanks for getting this posted, Angela. My go-to source when I'm feeling blue or furiated. And actually, I think "bicker-backer" may just end up in my personal lexicon. 1 Link to comment
rcc December 21, 2015 Share December 21, 2015 This thread is good for a laugh! Thanks for starting this. Link to comment
teebax December 21, 2015 Share December 21, 2015 This was from Friday, but I'm just catching up today: Reliable Definition: responsible for damages Example: "I wanted my name off the car because if anything would happen I'd be reliable for it." 2 Link to comment
Trini January 13, 2016 Share January 13, 2016 "It is what it is" = "I did it." or "I'm only sorry I got caught." or "Yeah, I was stupid." 3 Link to comment
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