Would you say “pop my cherry” at work?

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Hey so long as he doesn’t “shoot his wad” on the assignment.

Way out of line. Pop my cherry is not a phrase one wants to hear at work amongst adults.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I have also heard people using the phrase “money shot” at work. Uhhhmmmmm, no.


I heard that once too. I assumed the guy didn’t actually know what it meant.


What?! I’m no prude but I’ve always associated this with basketball
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I have also heard people using the phrase “money shot” at work. Uhhhmmmmm, no.


I heard that once too. I assumed the guy didn’t actually know what it meant.


What?! I’m no prude but I’ve always associated this with basketball

Ditto. I have never used it but thought it was where you threw the basketball from half court for a cash prize at half time you know, a money shot.

Anonymous
Money shot is not sexual (at least that wasn’t the original intent).

Cherry and wad are inappropriate, and I’m insanely liberal.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I have also heard people using the phrase “money shot” at work. Uhhhmmmmm, no.


I heard that once too. I assumed the guy didn’t actually know what it meant.


What?! I’m no prude but I’ve always associated this with basketball

Ditto. I have never used it but thought it was where you threw the basketball from half court for a cash prize at half time you know, a money shot.



Also, how is "money shot" sexual?
Anonymous
Instead of saying “Larlo is hard over for something” he says “Larlo has a hard on for something”.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Instead of saying “Larlo is hard over for something” he says “Larlo has a hard on for something”.


My boss says.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Instead of saying “Larlo is hard over for something” he says “Larlo has a hard on for something”.


My boss says.


Yuck.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I have also heard people using the phrase “money shot” at work. Uhhhmmmmm, no.


I heard that once too. I assumed the guy didn’t actually know what it meant.


What?! I’m no prude but I’ve always associated this with basketball

Ditto. I have never used it but thought it was where you threw the basketball from half court for a cash prize at half time you know, a money shot.



Also, how is "money shot" sexual?


Check out urban dictionary
Anonymous
Money shot is definitely sexual.
Anonymous
One younger coworker said “we will yeet this” on the markup of a project for a client in front of the client.

I know what yeet means bc I have teens but most there did not.

I had to have a talk with an intern a few years ago who said something like “Tim, you’re raping me with these orders!”
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I have also heard people using the phrase “money shot” at work. Uhhhmmmmm, no.


I heard that once too. I assumed the guy didn’t actually know what it meant.


What does it mean?

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Instead of saying “Larlo is hard over for something” he says “Larlo has a hard on for something”.


My boss says.


Yuck.


They also have different meanings!!!!
Anonymous
My 90! Year old Dad hates the term bug -as in that bugs me. He says it’s a homosexual term. And at his age of course that’s a bad thing.

So things evolve imo.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I have also heard people using the phrase “money shot” at work. Uhhhmmmmm, no.


I heard that once too. I assumed the guy didn’t actually know what it meant.


What?! I’m no prude but I’ve always associated this with basketball

Ditto. I have never used it but thought it was where you threw the basketball from half court for a cash prize at half time you know, a money shot.



Also, how is "money shot" sexual?


Check out urban dictionary


Wow I've used this phrase. But no longer. You don't need to check Urban dictionary; you can learn how the meaning had changed from Webster's!:
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/money%20shot
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