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meeper's Journal

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5 entries this month
 

20:40 May 21 2011
Times Read: 770


Ok, a mission for all of my friends: Get an old pair of clothes. Take them someplace public and arrange them appropriately. Post pictures of the aftermath.



Real Vampires love Vampire Rave

COMMENTS

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Damn those atheists preying on true believers!

19:10 May 17 2011
Times Read: 791


Just a heads up, a rapture date is coming up. Have you decided what to do for your beloved pet(s) once you’ve been raptured up?


COMMENTS

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Army
Army
05:00 May 18 2011

That is fucking hilarious. I love it!





Joli
Joli
20:38 May 19 2011

This is so clever and funny. I read it to everyone at work. Brilliant!





 

00:58 May 17 2011
Times Read: 820


Dear Twilight fans,





Please realize that because vampires are dead and have no blood pumping through them, they can never get an erection.





Enjoy fantasizing about that.





Sincerely,

Logic


COMMENTS

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Oceanne
Oceanne
00:59 May 17 2011

LMAO





Army
Army
01:06 May 17 2011

hahahaha!





Nightgame
Nightgame
01:13 May 17 2011

But at least they sparkle :)





radu
radu
01:17 May 17 2011

ROTFLMFAO





Morrigon
Morrigon
01:21 May 17 2011

Thank. You.





Vampirewitch39
Vampirewitch39
14:38 May 17 2011

You take all the fun out of it- damn you Logic.





PhoenicianDream
PhoenicianDream
01:39 May 22 2011

But what about rigor mortis?





 

I am Meeper... dirty, obscene, and rebellious!

17:28 May 10 2011
Times Read: 841


Meep!

The power of the meaningless





A few weeks ago, Thomas Murray, the principal of Danvers High School, banned the word meep from his school. Parents and students were warned, by automated calls and e-mails, that saying (or even “displaying”) the word meep would be grounds for suspension. Discuss

COMMENTS (46)





Supposedly, students at Danvers were meeping in “disruptive” ways, and hadn’t responded to teachers’ and administrators’ requests to, well, quit it already, leading to the all-out ban. “It has nothing to do with the word,” Murray told The Salem Evening News. “It has to do with the conduct of the students. We wouldn’t just ban a word just to ban a word.”



News of the ban made for a moderately sized sensation, full of entertaining elements - a (possibly) overzealous principal (who also forwarded e-mails containing the word meep to the local police), Muppet references (meep, as we all know, is what the hapless lab assistant Beaker says, often as things explode and catch fire around him), Road Runner references (with learned commentary at blogs such as Language Log, where it was pointed out that the fleet-footed bird’s beep-beep sounds more like meep-meep, with a spectrogram to prove it), students wearing “FREE MEEP” T-shirts, and social media references (the students allegedly used Facebook to coordinate their meeping).



A large part of the joy of the story, though, is the word meep itself. If the principal had banned a different four-letter word, some run-of-the-mill obscenity, another nonsense word (Monty Python’s ni!, anyone?), or even a different silly word such as rutabaga or spork, the reaction probably wouldn’t have been so gleeful. The very sound of meep is cheering: The long-e sound forces the face into a smile (like saying cheese for a photograph), and research has shown that even a forced smile can result in an improvement in mood.



Since meep is “not even a real word” and “doesn’t mean anything in particular” (as Danvers students Mike Spiewak and Melanie Crane have said in interviews), it can be made to mean just about anything: UrbanDictionary.com lists more than 70 separate user-contributed entries for meep, showing a word that is so versatile that it “may be used to substitute swear words or greet a person hello.” Most of the UrbanDictionary entries are fairly innocuous - “the sound made when one’s nose is touched affectionately” and “a person that would prefer to do something boring while others have fun” - but many are unprintable.



The word’s versatility was also called out in Connie Eble’s Campus Slang report from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in spring 2008, defined by students as “MEEP - /mip/ sound sequence that can in context have a range of meanings, e.g., greeting or farewell, expression of surprise or happiness, expression of pain, etc. From the Muppets.”



News stories and blog posts (and especially the commenters thereon) have picked up meep’s vagueness and mutability and enlarged upon it. Combine a blank slate like meep and the natural tendency of English to produce new words with suffixes and affixes (and then throw in a little paronomasia, or punning) and you have plenty of scope for meep-related fun. The students (meepsters or meepers) were supposedly planning a mass-meeping, at which people might get meeped, which of course would cause meep-ruption. Meep proved to be an excellent word for expressing disapproval of the ban - “Oh, for meep’s sake,” “Read it and meep,” - although one commenter at the popular discussion site MetaFilter felt the story merited the stronger “Jesus mept,” and another picked up on a popular conspiracy-theory trope with a rousing “WAKE UP MEEPLE!”



And the e-mails containing meep that Murray forwarded to the police? They may have been sent at the behest of members of the Facebook “MEEP” group (which currently has more than 5,000 members) who encouraged others to meep-roll the school administrators.



Of course, meep isn’t the first word of deliberate vagueness to catch on with those interested in tweaking authority. Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious, we know from the song, sounds “atrocious,” but what does it mean? (Whatever you want it to mean, said Mary Poppins.) Similarly, has anyone ever determined what was on the line when people on TV’s “Laugh-In” said: “You bet your sweet bippy”? Even the show’s hosts, Dan Rowan and Dick Martin, were unsure - as they told The New York Times in 1968, “We don’t even know…they’re just funny.”



Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious, bippy, and meep all reinforce a truth about language that we rarely stop to think about: All words mean only what we all collectively agree they should mean, no more and no less. In Danvers, meep came to mean: “We’ll obey your rules when we feel like it.” And that, in the end, made it a dirty word.



by By Erin McKean

December 13, 2009

E-mail Erin McKean at erin@wordnik.com. For past columns, go to www.boston.com/ideas.


COMMENTS

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Joli
Joli
19:47 May 10 2011

No meepin way!





Vampirewitch39
Vampirewitch39
23:16 May 10 2011

I meep, you meep... we all meep. ;)





Requiem
Requiem
01:05 May 17 2011

♥ Ahahaha I'd have had to meep repeatedly, just because it's so darn ridiculous heh. =)





 

Spam, spam, and more spam...really why do holiday mean everyone needs to give generic empty words?

01:54 May 09 2011
Times Read: 853


I rechecked it and it said your female but sorry for thinking you were a mom



On 01:47:09 May 09 2011 (-0 GMT) meeper wrote:



Nope. In fact my profile doesn't have any words on it. But thanks for the wishes!




On 22:46:31 May 08 2011 (-0 GMT) wrote:



Yur profile said so




On 22:39:01 May 08 2011 (-0 GMT) meeper wrote:



Well then why would you assume I am?




On 19:44:54 May 08 2011 (-0 GMT) wrote:



I'M not a mother




On 17:29:01 May 08 2011 (-0 GMT) meeper wrote:



Ummmm thanks you too!




On 17:19:59 May 08 2011 (-0 GMT) wrote:



Happy mothers day

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