Can i use the term bunny boiler, as the narrator to describe an unseen character? Or is it too obscure or cliche pop reference?
Can i use the term bunny boiler, as the narrator to describe an unseen character? Or is it too obscure or cliche pop reference?
Personally I don't know the term. I imagined a horrid contraption to make rabbit stew.
you're dead to me
I'm sensing this is a hurtful post. I'm very intuitive about these things.No idea what that means, but that doesn't preclude me from wanting to get my hands on one to put that lapine pole-dancer out of his/her/its misery.
Here's a fun fact: I saw this online once and jotted it down, I don't know the source~
Rabbits are lapine.
Others include: cervine (deer), ovine (sheep), equine (horse), caprine (goat), avian (bird), and the one that needs no description: asinine.
Reference to Glenn Close's character in Fatal Attraction?
No, don't make the tassels go. I did say it was a horrid contraption. I would never eat bunny stew.
Looking at the responses, I think perhaps it's more common in the UK than the US? (Pretty common slang around here, even among the young 'uns who don't know where it comes from)
Can i use the term bunny boiler, as the narrator to describe an unseen character? Or is it too obscure or cliche pop reference?
So what is it?
Reference to Glenn Close's character in Fatal Attraction?
Yes. In general reference to a scary/stalker type female.
Yes. In general reference to a scary/stalker type female.