Reply
Wed 25 Jul, 2018 09:10 pm
Does "Like, BIGTIME, ya know?" mean "(that <the face that Strzok and his men were cheated> is) like, a wide-spread story, you know?"
Thanks in anticipation.
Context:
layman wrote:
I don't know who Strzok and his homeys paid insurance premiums to, but I do know that they got completely ******* ripped off, eh? Like, BIGTIME, ya know?
Source
Bigtime means the same thing as Trump's favorite "Big league."
In baseball, it mean ya aint playin in the minor leagues, but the big leagues (the majors).
There's small time thieves, and big time thieves.
Ya can get ripped off just a little bit, or ya can get ripped off BIGTIME. Get the picture, Ori?
@layman,
Thank you.
The picture I got is: They got ripped off/cheated badly/greatly.
Am I on the right track?
@oristarA,
oristarA wrote:
Thank you.
The picture I got is: They got ripped off/cheated badly/greatly.
Am I on the right track?
Sho nuff! Another way of sayin the same damn thing coulda been "Like, BAD, ya know?
@layman,
layman wrote:
Sho nuff! Another way of sayin the same damn thing coulda been "Like, BAD, ya know?
I am sure it is a local language. Southern or Northern of the US?
@oristarA,
oristarA wrote:
layman wrote:
Sho nuff! Another way of sayin the same damn thing coulda been "Like, BAD, ya know?
I am sure it is a local language. Southern or Northern of the US?
Naw, aint nuthin local about it, eh, Ori? It's just plain old American, that's all.