Logicmaxxer
MATH, LOGIC, REASON (2+2)2=8
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"BROH", "Broh", "broh".
I stumbled upon this fascinating word in one thread, it seems it is a modification of a well known word "bro" used by anglo saxon youth. But "broh" sound eerily similar to the german "Broth", I conclude thereafter that it ought to satiate the person that is meant to hear it during the conversation, or maybe the other way around... to make it hungry and drooling. The word also could mean "broh and circus" which would imply that a conversation belongs to these that are the most primitive . But I digress. I simply find it fascinating and worth studying. Should it become a common word in english language or not? There are as many pros as there are cons.
I stumbled upon this fascinating word in one thread, it seems it is a modification of a well known word "bro" used by anglo saxon youth. But "broh" sound eerily similar to the german "Broth", I conclude thereafter that it ought to satiate the person that is meant to hear it during the conversation, or maybe the other way around... to make it hungry and drooling. The word also could mean "broh and circus" which would imply that a conversation belongs to these that are the most primitive . But I digress. I simply find it fascinating and worth studying. Should it become a common word in english language or not? There are as many pros as there are cons.