To cause harm knowingly & intentionally to someone like a friend: Usually carried out via
- Betrayals of Trust that was given on previous agreements,
- Deceitful actions or other forms of lies,
- (and) secretly acting in ways that are contradictory to whatever impression you intended to project for friends beforehand.
An example would be something like hypocrisy with friends:
Pretending to see gossip as bad, only to then have the intention of using something against a friend at a later moment.
She promised to keep that secret and I trusted her, but now she used it to make me look bad in front of our friends! What a stab in the back ð
To cause harm knowingly & intentionally to someone like a friend: Usually carried out via
- Betrayals of Trust that was given on previous agreements,
- Deceitful actions or other forms of lies,
- (and) secretly acting in ways that are contradictory to whatever impression you intended to project for friends beforehand.
An example would be something like hypocrisy with friends:
Where a friend is pretending to see gossip as bad, only to then have intentions of using something against us at a later moment.
She promised to keep that secret and I trusted her, but now she used it to make me look bad in front of our friends! What a stab in the back ð
To cause harm knowingly & intentionally to someone like a friend: Usually carried out via
- Betrayals of Trust that was given on previous agreements,
- Deceitful actions or other forms of lies,
- (and) secretly acting in ways that are contradictory to whatever impression you intended to project for friends beforehand.
An example would be something like hypocrisy with friends:
Pretending to see gossip as bad, only to then have the intention of using something against a friend at a later moment.
She promised to keep that secret and I trusted her, but now she used it to make me look bad in front of our friends! What a stab in the back ð
A shorter & more informal way of either saying feckless or just in place of other profanity like f*ck, it leans more to humour as opposed to aggression.
It is a word that's usually used more in Ireland than everywhere else.
"You're a feck! A feckin' feckless fecky fecker! So feck off to where the sun doesn't shine!"
A shorter & more informal way of either saying feckless or just in place of other profanity like f*ck, it leans more to humour as opposed to aggression.
It is a word that's usually used more in Ireland than everywhere else.
"You're a feck! A feckin' feckless fecky fecker! So feck off to where the sun doesn't shine!"