Short for âon the for realâ. Frequently used immediately preceding or following a sincere compliment in writing (via comments, forum, text, etc) which could easily be misinterpreted as disingenuous or sarcastic. Informs the recipient(s) that the statement (or question) should be taken literally; no need to evaluate whether theyâre being tooled like a chump. Identical meaning as âOTRâ but distinct in that itâs âspelled outâ with the inclusion of âfâ to convey the intended authenticity, with the bonus of implying/indicating youâre aware of vernacular which existed prior to the invention of the fleshlight.
Conversational use of the longer format âon the for real?â as an exclamation, synonymous with âare you serious?, expressing legit amazement or incredulity when presented with unexpected information, dates back at least to the late 1980s.
When I saw your accomplishment I was inspired to complete work on my own project, and attempt a similarly high level of quality to what youâve produced here. OTFR.
Or...
How were you able to accomplish such a positive outcome in only the given period of time? OTFR
Adjective: something of low quality.
Usually describes something amateurishly or poorly constructed, or executed by those of inferior skill to a very low quality. Inferior by comparison to a commonly accepted standard.
Often applied to a team, group or individual of minimal or questionable competence - therefore unlikely to perform assigned function(s) at a level of high quality, causing low expectations.
Not normally used to describe a complete failure, but rather something fabricated/organized/implemented in a manner which would be overwhelmingly regarded as below par.
Not one of these guys was able to hit the target, thatâs some chuck wagon outfit you got there
Or...
This thing fell apart after I used it twice, thatâs some chuck wagon construction