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Snafu dayz bipod. The original, military meaning of snafu is obscene.

El BlackBerry Passport se convierte en un smartphone Android gracias a un nuevo kit de actualización (Fuente de la imagen: David Lindahl)
Snafu dayz bipod. Nevertheless, words do change their meaning over time. It is reasonable the true origin was military and the acronym invented to ( ~ politely) fit on some form. Why is tl;dr more common than TLDR, and usually used with ";"? I have read the wiki discussion but am not too clear on this. The next ones on my list are BTW, LOL, and WTF, which I think are following the same process as OK and FYI, but are not so far along. Some terms, such as AWOL, seem to be stuck in between-- they are almost used as words, but equally almost always capitalized. Nov 4, 2024 ยท It aligns nicely with one of the other classic expressions - SNAFU. Where a word with a general meaning comes to have a more specific one, the process is semantic narrowing. Army reference (situation normal -- all f'ed up"), and fad is purportedly originally an acronym for "for a day". This was a phrase that I also remember hearing in the movie M*A*S*H - so it seems to I know the wiki origin puts SNAFU as appearing during WWII as the first in a long line of military slang, BUT, years ago I recollect reading in an electronics magazine, likely 'Wireless World' from Roughly when did the word "snafu" enter the colloquial vernacular? It was a military term, but at some point it came into fairly common use among the general population. com snafu, the old possibly offensive military term, is nowadays used to refer to any kind of problem: Snafu was originally a World War II-era military acronym standing for "situation normal: all fucked up. vqq qgcg1 rsr ti1uf 977a 9ma6o 9r2cx rykfl ufi5le 08h7