| Go! |
| I hate it when they correct my bad grammar. |
| Fart |
| Assume a woman is incapable or not qualified. |
| Brush off a woman's opinion or thought as her just being emotional (which is interesting, considering the amount of violence and abuse caused by men who can't regulate their emotions). |
If they correct my grammar when it’s right maybe I’d hate it, but if my grammar is wrong (wink wink) I think it’s fine. |
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Another "men suck!" thread on DCUM. How... unusual.
Yawn. |
| Why use right grammar when wrong word do trick |
| Mansplain. I once had a date go on and on about Renaissance art. We were in a group and he just about lost it when another person at the table told him I had a Master's degree in Art History. |
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Chewing gum
Failure to open doors Failure to yield to women when exiting elevator Mansplaining Manspreading Failure to keep body tight and swole |
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Yes, mansplaining.
Just the blatant assumption, sometimes before a woman even starts talking, that she doesn't really know what she's talking about, or doesn't have the right to have an opinion, or that the opinion is invalid merely because they say so. I have a great dad, and I had the good sense to go on to marry a keeper (14 years now), so 'not all men' for sure, but a hell of a lot of them. |
Hilarious that women invented that term. Every conversation a woman has is basically her over explaining something |
So I totally agree re Mansplaining. But I don’t think the example you gave us actually mansplaining. It’s not like Renaissance art is a thing most people know a lot about that he could assume you knew about it, plus if other people were there it sounds like none of them had degrees in art history, only you. In all his ramblings you couldn’t have interjected a hey, that’s super interesting, as part of my art history studies we looked at... from the Renaissance...? If he still tried to teach you about Renaissance art AFTER knowing you had the degree then that would have been mansplaining. |
| Breath |
| Hit on me. Especially at work. |