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    • Criticize or insult someone harshly and publicly

      • At its core, “read someone to filth” means to criticize or insult someone harshly and publicly. It’s not just any kind of criticism though; it’s typically done with wit, humor, and a keen eye for detail. The goal is not just to insult but also expose flaws or hypocrisies in the person being criticized.
  1. Mar 24, 2016 · To 'read' is to harshly critiqued/insult someone with your quick wit. To 'read for filth' is to really lay into someone and verbally (and often humorously), tear them apart.

  2. At its core, “read someone to filth” means to criticize or insult someone harshly and publicly. It’s not just any kind of criticism though; it’s typically done with wit, humor, and a keen eye for detail.

  3. Apr 24, 2024 · ( idiomatic, informal, at first especially in the black LGBT community) To thoroughly insult, to comprehensively call attention to the flaws or shortcomings of (someone). Synonym: read someone for filth. Categories: English lemmas. English verbs. English multiword terms. English idioms. English informal terms. en:LGBT.

  4. Read Someone To Filth definition: To thoroughly insult, to comprehensively call attention to the flaws of (someone).

    • The One About Poison
    • The One with The Double Burn
    • The One That Got Theatrical
    • The One That Put Ageists in Their Place
    • The One That Is, Obviously, About Dicks
    • The One That Handled A Whippersnapper
    • The One That Shut It Down
    • The One That Got Ugly
    • The One About Having A Cabbage Thrown
    • The One That Was Mutually-Assured

    Nancy Astor, the first woman to sit in the British House Of Commonsas a member of Parliament, was a famous antagonist of the British politician Winston Churchill, and they sparred on everything. He didn't like her entry into Parliament and she hated his politics, and they had so many poisonous exchanges that they culminated in this thunderous dialo...

    In February 1839, Henry Clay, a statesman running for president, declared his priorities about truth to the U.S. Senate, in what would become a famous line. The politician Thomas Brackett Reedwas not impressed. Whether he made his riposte to Clay himself or to a person who relayed it to him isn't clear, but the response is clear enough. Clay:"I wou...

    The playwright George Bernard Shaw was renowned for his wit, but he got a perhaps unexpected comeuppance in a telegram exchange with Winston Churchill. Shaw:"Am enclosing two tickets to the first night of my new play. Bring a friend. If you have one." Churchill:"Cannot possibly attend first night, will attend second. If there is one."

    The ambassador and playwright Clare Booth Luce and the famous wit Dorothy Parker, pictured (who's behind so many attributed one-liners it's doubtful she had enough time to actually say them all) had a famous exchange which has now passed into history as the epitome of bitchiness. Luce moved aside to let Parker go through a doorway first; Parker's r...

    The battle of wits between Winston Churchill and another British politician, the leftist Clement Atlee, was famous. He once called Atlee "a sheep in sheep's clothing"and "a modest man who has much to be modest about". According to Parliamentary lore, Churchill and Atlee were once at the urinal at the same time, and Churchill deliberately stood as f...

    Debates on television bring up a lot of snappy wit — at least if all the conditions are right. They were perfect in 1986, when incumbent South Carolina Senator Fritz Hollings debated candidate Henry McMaster. McMaster, for no apparent reason, decided 64-year-old Hollings needed some medical review. McMaster:"You should take a drug test." Hollings: ...

    Dan Quayle isn't much more than a half-forgotten punchline these days, but when Quayle ran for the vice-presidency in 1988 he was the subject of a lot of attention — and some pretty smart lines. Quayle didn't have much experience, but chose to draw parallels between himself and Jack Kennedy, a fact that his challenger in a televised debate, Senator...

    If you think debates these days get ugly, you should have been around during the beginnings of Abraham Lincoln's political career. He had seven fairly ferocious public debates with U.S. Senator Stephen Douglas in 1858, and at one point Douglas called Abraham Lincoln "two-faced." Lincoln:"I leave it to my audience. If I had another face, do you thin...

    Wilde was renowned for his witticisms. This was a man, after all, who once turned up at U.S. Customs and announced he had "nothing to declare but his genius," which the TSA these days would probably find highly alarming. He displayed the quickness of his wit on one (alleged) occasion when taking a bow after a performance of The Importance Of Being ...

    Oscar Levant, the comedian, pianist and composer, and George Gershwin (pictured), who composed some of the most famous standards of all time, had a friendly and fractious relationship. Both were successful (though Levant only produced one breakout song, Blame It On My Youth), but they had one particularly prickly exchange at a party, with Gershwin ...

    • JR Thorpe
  5. May 24, 2017 · read to filth (or) read for filth Basically to scold, or to get called out on something; to reprimand, to degrade, to cuss out, to correct, to set them straight, to tell them what's what & who's who.

  6. read someone to filth. ( idiom, at first especially in the black LGBT community) To thoroughly insult, to comprehensively call attention to the flaws of (someone). See citations:read someone to filth.

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