I think its from medical terminology. I’m going to guess it was popularized by the 90’s show ER. I’m pulling this cimpletely out of my ass, but that’s my guess
nah but when you’re i.e.-ing, et ceterin’ you know you’re being technical or formal. latin via french (plenty, round, gratuity) is a different category because it conforms to english grammar, it doesn’t signal literacy & culture you gotta do modern french for that
what the fuck that’s like a casual thing to say, how did a nerdlord get it into the common lexicon
I think it filtered through the medical professions.
DOKTORS!!!
dokkktors
DoKKKtor$$
dorktors
Death to America
Probably more specifically, daytime hospital dramas on television.
Nurse I need forty CCCPs of communism, stat
Wait til you hear about a person’s M O
moldy odor?
If only
True crime as a genre is enough to explain this one
I think its from medical terminology. I’m going to guess it was popularized by the 90’s show ER. I’m pulling this cimpletely out of my ass, but that’s my guess
There’s plenty of gratuitous Latin to go around, e.g: ie, etc.
There’s Latin gratuito plenitati to go around, exempli gratia: id est, et cetera.
*around
arotundus
nah but when you’re i.e.-ing, et ceterin’ you know you’re being technical or formal. latin via french (plenty, round, gratuity) is a different category because it conforms to english grammar, it doesn’t signal literacy & culture you gotta do modern french for that
I use NB on my jira tickets to be a dick