only1kcm March 31, 2014 Share March 31, 2014 "Wroten" will be added to the dictionary! 1 Link to comment
Milz March 31, 2014 Share March 31, 2014 (edited) Is anyone keeping a JJ Dictionary list? IIRC, years ago someone had a Judy Judy Lexicon on line. Anyhow, some words: bickerment borrow (as in "I borrowed her the money") boughten conversate (but it's now in OED,from what I understand) fraudulate tooken wroten Edited March 31, 2014 by Milz Link to comment
AngelaHunter March 31, 2014 Share March 31, 2014 Yes, we have quite an extensive JJ dictionary. http://www.welcometosilentmovies.com/jj/jj2.htm 3 Link to comment
ItsHelloPattiagain April 2, 2014 Share April 2, 2014 Helloooo ladies and gents! Popping over from TWOP and glad to be here! Please add to your dictionary: Axed (or maybe it's Aksed?) As in "I never axed my cousin to broughten me the money" 1 Link to comment
Patssy Stoned April 29, 2014 Share April 29, 2014 I remember "bicker-backer". Tooken drives me right up the wall. Link to comment
BellaLugosi April 29, 2014 Share April 29, 2014 Proceeded to. It's a real phrase, but I don't think people use it in conversation as often as they do on these court shows. 3 Link to comment
Toaster Strudel April 30, 2014 Share April 30, 2014 No one added the brilliant IRREGARDING? 1 Link to comment
Milz May 2, 2014 Share May 2, 2014 (edited) Heard this on a re-run case. Agreeance: (noun) an agreement pronounciation: "agree-ance". Usage: "Me and her made an agreeance for the rent." Edited May 2, 2014 by Milz Link to comment
BellaLugosi May 3, 2014 Share May 3, 2014 Fluvulous. A lawsuit without merit. Also known as frivolous. Link to comment
zillabreeze May 4, 2014 Share May 4, 2014 Did anyone hear the litagant say her boyfriend had been "carpenting" for a living? Link to comment
ItsHelloPattiagain May 4, 2014 Share May 4, 2014 Heard over and over again - "Due to the fact that. . . " as in "I didn't have insurance due to the fact that I had to buy my baby mama a new phone" - Hello, people, just use the word "BECAUSE". (and the Grammar Nazi says get off my lawn due to the fact that you are using bad English) 1 Link to comment
BellaLugosi May 4, 2014 Share May 4, 2014 Yes! It's dumb people trying to sound smart. 1 Link to comment
ItsHelloPattiagain May 4, 2014 Share May 4, 2014 Or when people "conversate". Or when they have a verbal discussion - what, you can't have a physical discussion or a mental one where you just think and the other person reads your mind? 1 Link to comment
Lonesome Rhodes May 5, 2014 Share May 5, 2014 I like when folks declare they have done, or are about to do, "money business." Link to comment
AngelaHunter May 5, 2014 Share May 5, 2014 What drives me mad is the constant use of "Proceeded". "I proceeded to run a bath/ he proceeded to throw a lamp at my head/she proceeded to punch me numerous of times, etc. While watching some old eps today, I heard a good one. "I was in need of upgrading my transportation." = "I wanted to buy a newer hooptie." 2 Link to comment
Toaster Strudel May 5, 2014 Share May 5, 2014 My house was bulgarized. I heard that this week. 1 Link to comment
arejay May 5, 2014 Share May 5, 2014 My house was bulgarized. I heard that this week. I heard it, too, and floved it immediately. Link to comment
ItsHelloPattiagain May 5, 2014 Share May 5, 2014 My house was bulgarized. I heard that this week. Did a Bulgarian do it? Did they steal your bulgar? 1 Link to comment
Milz May 6, 2014 Share May 6, 2014 Did a Bulgarian do it? lol. you come home and find it completely furnitured in Bulgarian products. 4 Link to comment
BellaLugosi May 6, 2014 Share May 6, 2014 "You haven't let me present my case!" This is grammatically correct, but usually comes after someone has been talking for 15 minutes, and Judge Judy is sick of them and daydreaming of sushi. Link to comment
zillabreeze May 10, 2014 Share May 10, 2014 Heard this jewel on a vintage case this week: " I pacifically told him that he could not..." Someone said that to me once and I used "atlantically" in my answer, of course it went unoticed! 8 Link to comment
MrsEVH May 15, 2014 Share May 15, 2014 Over the last two days she used "Kafuffle" (sp?). Link to comment
Milz May 15, 2014 Share May 15, 2014 Kerfuffle. It's a real word. http://www.oxforddictionaries.com/us/definition/american_english/kerfuffle 1 Link to comment
Lonesome Rhodes May 21, 2014 Share May 21, 2014 "Borrow me" a computer. My brother has used this for years and years. He is currently spending long overdue time in our local correctional institution. Alas, English is not taught there. Link to comment
mbutterfly May 22, 2014 Share May 22, 2014 Heard this on a re-run case. Agreeance: (noun) an agreement pronounciation: "agree-ance". Usage: "Me and her made an agreeance for the rent." I hadn't ever heard "agree-ance" until Sherri Shepherd and Jenny McCarthy used it this week on The View. So they got the word from plaintiffs and defendants on JJ -- interesting. Link to comment
zillabreeze May 23, 2014 Share May 23, 2014 Oh for craps sake! If it's an image of something it's PICTURE, not a PITCHER! Middle aged woman on rerun today kept wanting to show JJ "pitchers of her car", "pitchers of her street". Unless you are under the age of five, get it f-ing right. It's like nails on a chalkboard. Also, the other day someone used that other jewel- "supposaBly". Link to comment
MrMattyMatt May 23, 2014 Share May 23, 2014 I'm sorry but the mainstream media seriously need to put the axe on the "I axed him a question" conundrum. Link to comment
Intocats May 30, 2014 Share May 30, 2014 (edited) A new one for the lexicon! "Passengers-by" -- as uttered by the defendant in the San Francisco Baby Sling Chihuahua case. "I always keep my dog from interfering with the passengers-by on the sidewalk." Obviously it didn't work that day. You guys might not be as old as I am, but these three litigants reminded me of Peter, Paul and Mary, with dogs instead of guitars. (edited because I can't spell "chihuahua"!) Edited May 30, 2014 by Intocats 1 Link to comment
designing1 June 3, 2014 Share June 3, 2014 Today's plaintiff "visualized" someone hitting a dog with an umbrella as opposed to "seeing" it. The two are not the same, and it's too bad this otherwise reasonably intelligent woman felt the need to go with the big, incorrect word as opposed to the simple, appropriate word. 2 Link to comment
DoctorK June 4, 2014 Share June 4, 2014 (edited) Just as good was "their campers were subsequent to that car". I don't think that someone who uses fancy sounding words when they don't know what they mean is necessarily intelligent or educated, my experience has been the opposite. Plus I was surprised that JJ let her get away several times with responding to direct questions with completely non responsive answers consisting of totally irrelevant statements. Finally, she sure sounded to me like she was reciting a memorised script, which would explain the non responsive answers. Edited June 4, 2014 by DoctorK Link to comment
FairyDusted June 5, 2014 Share June 5, 2014 (edited) The whole Proceeded to.... bugs me to know no end. I was helping someone get together a manuscipt and she abused it to, so much I quit! Real people do not tell a personal story like that. Moving on to coversate... Apollo from The Real Housewives of Atlanta uses that as well. As a matter of fact, I'd Flove if Judge Judy would conduct all those reunions! Can you imagine?! Edited June 5, 2014 by FairyDusted 2 Link to comment
BellaLugosi June 5, 2014 Share June 5, 2014 Fisteses is not a word! There's a video on youtube, Judge Judy vs Nene. 2 Link to comment
Rick Kitchen June 6, 2014 Share June 6, 2014 I heard a new one today. A woman was suing a driver for hitting her teenaged daughter while the daughter was jaywalking. The mother said in the hallterview that her daughter had suffered a "head collision." 3 Link to comment
DoctorK June 6, 2014 Share June 6, 2014 (edited) Oh my, from today's case with the missing car title and the large defendant with blonde and blue hair: he knew full headedly ... apparently meaning ahead of time? P.S. Milz - the car was treated for minor injuries and released. Edited June 6, 2014 by DoctorK 2 Link to comment
Toaster Strudel June 9, 2014 Share June 9, 2014 We must add: Full-headedly ...which has nothing to do with luscious hair, as you full-headedly know already. 2 Link to comment
6 MeowMeowBeenz June 9, 2014 Share June 9, 2014 Full-headedly made me shout at the TV "that's going in the dictionary!!" 3 Link to comment
iwasish June 17, 2014 Share June 17, 2014 The number of mangled and misused words used are in direct correlation to the amount of BS the litigant is trying to put past JJ. 1 Link to comment
MrsEVH June 28, 2014 Share June 28, 2014 Can we have a thread for some of the favorite things that Judge Judy says? 1 Link to comment
DebbieW June 28, 2014 Share June 28, 2014 I grind my teeth every time someone says "textes" as in "I have the textes that she sent me saying she owes me the money." 1 Link to comment
Guest June 29, 2014 Share June 29, 2014 Can we have a thread for some of the favorite things that Judge Judy says? Here you go. By the way, you guys are free to start topics you don't have to wait for me. But, if you need help, PM or ping me. Link to comment
poeticlicensed July 7, 2014 Share July 7, 2014 "under the understanding" is one of my faves. When I gave my loser boyfriend the money, it was under the understanding that he would pay me back once he got his taxes. Link to comment
6 MeowMeowBeenz July 8, 2014 Share July 8, 2014 When I gave my loser boyfriend the money, it was under the understanding that he would pay me back once he got his taxes. Actually, to be correct in the JJ universe, the sentence should read "WHENEVER I gave (or borrowed!) my loser boyfriend the money..." 2 Link to comment
zillabreeze July 15, 2014 Share July 15, 2014 Today, one of the parties "kept getting phone calls 'spearadicly'" - I'm guessing "sporadically". 1 Link to comment
Quof July 16, 2014 Share July 16, 2014 I couldn't decide if she meant "periodically" or "sporadically." Link to comment
ItsHelloPattiagain July 16, 2014 Share July 16, 2014 (edited) "Being that fact that". . . or "due to the fact that" (instead of because) As in "Being the fact that I had no driver's license my cousin put the car in her name" then there's always the "I spoke to her verbally" (as opposed to telepathically?!?!) And I cannot remember if it was JJ or People's Court - "slumplord" (as in "That guy is a slumplord because he got mad because I didn't pay rent due to the fact that the house was filled with roaches/ rats/ mice/ garbage/ no water/ no heat/ stains on the carpet my kids made with magic markers and kool aid") Edited July 16, 2014 by ItsHelloPattiagain Link to comment
6 MeowMeowBeenz August 1, 2014 Share August 1, 2014 Did my ears deceive me or did some guy say "stampelled" (instead of stampeded?) on one of the reruns the other day? Link to comment
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