Dictionary Definition
bullshit n : obscene words for unacceptable
behavior; "I put up with a lot of bullshit from that jerk"; "what
he said was mostly bull" [syn: bull, Irish bull,
horseshit, shit, crap, dogshit] v : talk through one's
hat; "The politician was not well prepared for the debate and faked
it" [syn: bull, fake] [also: bullshitting, bullshitted]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- vulgar slang Blatantly
false statements, generally made with intent to deceive.
- That's bullshit! I called your office and they said you never came in!
- vulgar slang A
card
game in which the object is to bluff about cards laid down and
to determine when one's opponents are bluffing.
- Anyone want to play a few hands of bullshit?
- vulgar slang An object
of frustration and/or disgust.
- "This is bullshit!" -- The Monarch
- In the context of "New England": angry
- He was so bullshit when Red Sox lost the game, he went out and
got totally drunk.
- I can't believe I have to work this week end. That makes me so fucking bullshit.
- He was so bullshit when Red Sox lost the game, he went out and
got totally drunk.
- The faeces of a bull.
Synonyms
- BS
- bull
- bulldada
- bull puckey
- bushwah
- cheat (card game)
- I doubt it (card game)
Translations
deceitful statements, etc
- Bosnian: sranje
- Dutch: gelul, onzin, bullshit
- Finnish: paskapuhe, hevonpaska
- French: conneries
- Greek: μαλακίες
- Icelandic: kjaftæði , bull , þvættingur
- Indonesian: cuma ngomong gede
- Italian: coglionate
- Malaysian: mengarut
- Norwegian: pisspreik
- Polish: gówno prawda
- Serbian:
- Spanish: tontería, tpendejada, idiotez, huevada, mierda, caca
- Swedish: skitsnack
card game
- Finnish: fusku
- Icelandic: lygari
- Swedish: bluffstopp
Verb
- vulgar slang To tell
lies, exaggerate; to
mislead; to deceive.
- I think you're bullshitting. Let’s just call your office and
see if you even came in.
- You’re bullshitting me. I called your office and you never even came in.
- He caught my attention with irrelevant asides that didn’t quite make sense, but sounded very erudite if you didn’t think about it too much. In other words, I noticed that he was bullshitting. http://www.languagehat.com/archives/002815.php
- You’re bullshitting me. I called your office and you never even came in.
- I think you're bullshitting. Let’s just call your office and
see if you even came in.
- vulgar slang To have
casual conversation with no real point.
- I will probably just go and bullshit with Joe for awhile.
Translations
to tell lies, exaggerate
- Finnish: puhua paskaa
- Thai: เว่อ, โม้
to have casual conversation with no real point
- Finnish: puhua paskaa, jauhaa paskaa
- ttbc French: dire des conneries
- ttbc Greek: δουλεύω (dulevo)
- ttbc Italian: dire coglionate
- ttbc Spanish: huevear, decir tonterías
- ttbc Swedish: snacka skit
Interjection
bullshit!- vulgar slang An expression of disbelief at what one has just heard.
Translations
bullshit!
- Chinese: tzwae-nyeouh
- Dutch: onzin
- Finnish: paskanmarjat! haista paska!
- French: mon œil!
- Indonesian: cuma ngomong gede
- Polish: pierdolisz!
- Spanish: ¡tonterías!, ¡pendejadas!, ¡huevadas!
- Swedish: skit
Extensive Definition
Bullshit (often abbreviated BS), also Bullcrap,
is a common English
expletive. It can also
be shortened to just "Bull".
Most commonly, it describes tautological,
incorrect, misleading, or false language and statements. Literally,
it describes the feces of
a bull. As with many
expletives, it can be used as an interjection (or in many
other parts of
speech) and can carry a wide variety of meanings.
Bullshitting is usually used to describe
statements that are false, or made-up. Usually people describe
other people's action of making a lot of statements as bullshitting
in arguments, when one is making up rules or making examples that
are not anything to do with what they are discussing or when one is
making statements by using examples that need different rules to be
applied, so this person is bullshitting
As it contains the word "shit", the term is usually
considered foul
language, hence the use of the euphemistic abbreviations
"bull" and "BS". Nonetheless, the term is prevalent in American
English and, as with many words, the term is used in a variety
of countries, some dating back to approximately the same era World
War I. In British
English, bollocks
is a comparable expletive, although bullshit is now a commonly used
expletive in British English also.
While bullshit can be used in a deprecating
sense, the term 'bullshit artist' may imply a measure of respect
for the skill required to "bullshit" effectively.
In popular explanations of philosophy, the word bullshit
is used to denote utterances and speech acts
which does not add to the meaning of the set of sentences uttered,
but which is added purely to persuade interlocutors of the
validity or importance of other utterances. The accuracy of the
information is irrelevant whilst "bullshitting"; whether true or
false, "bullshit" is the intention to distort the information or to
otherwise achieve a desirable outcome, making "bullshit" a close
cousin to rhetoric as
Plato
conceived it. The philosophical use of the term was first
systematically described by Harry
Frankfurt (see below), but has been used longer than that, for
instance by proponents of Analytical
Marxism.
Etymology
"Bull", meaning nonsense, dates from the 17th century (Concise Oxford Dictionary), whereas the term "bullshit" is popularly considered to have been first used in 1915, in American slang, and to have come into popular usage only during World War II. The word "bull" itself may have derived from the Old French boul meaning "fraud, deceit" (Oxford English Dictionary). The term "horseshit" is a near synonym.The earliest attestation mentioned by the Concise
Oxford Dictionary is in fact T. S.
Eliot, who between 1910 and 1916 wrote an early poem to which
he gave the title The
Triumph of Bullshit, written in the form of a ballade. The first stanza
goes:
- Ladies, on whom my attentions have waitedIf you consider my merits are smallEtiolated, alembicated,Orotund, tasteless, fantastical,Monotonous, crotchety, constipated,Impotent galamatiasAffected, possibly imitated,For Christ's sake stick it up your ass.
The word bullshit does not appear in the text of
the poem, though in keeping with the ballade form, the refrain "For Christ's sake stick
it up your ass" appears in each following verse and concludes the
envoi. Eliot did not publish this poem during his lifetime.
As to earlier etymology the OED
cites bull with the meaning "trivial, insincere, untruthful talk or
writing, nonsense". It describes this usage as being of unknown
origin, but notes the following: "OF boul,
boule, bole fraud, deceit, trickery; mod.
Icel bull ‘nonsense’; also ME bull
BUL ‘falsehood’, and BULL verb, to befool, mock, cheat."
Although as the above makes clear there is no
confirmed etymological connection it might be noted that these
older meanings are synonymous with the modern expression "Bull"
otherwise generally considered (and intentionally used as) a
contraction of "Bullshit". Bullshit is often considered a vulgar
word, and in the U.S. and New Zealand, it must be censored from
over-the-air radio broadcasts.
Uses of "bullshit"
Bullshit is commonly used to describe what often occurs in situations where truth and accuracy are far less important than the ability to achieve a suitable response in the audience, often needed in politics, religion or advertising).. In many cases, such a response helps to gain popularity or favor.All skewed, spinned, knowingly dubious, carefully
framed, pretentious, misleading or vacuous statements are referred
to as "bullshit". Examples of "bullshit" can include
sales/marketing pitches, public relations releases, and demagogic
or disingenuous pronouncements made by politicians. More mundane
examples of the word's use often involve the lives of ordinary
people. For example, it is not at all uncommon to hear of people
"bullshitting" a job
interview, or attributing their performance in an examination to their ability
to "bullshit". In this sense, "bullshitting" walks the line between
extemporaneous speaking and lying outright. It is also common for
people to "bullshit" friends or acquaintances, by spinning an
elaborate tall tale. The
object here is to make the bullshittees look foolish by dint of
their gullibility in accepting the bullshit as fact. "Bullshit"
does not necessarily have to be a complete fabrication; with only
basic knowledge about a topic, bullshit is often used to make the
audience believe that one knows far more about the topic by
feigning total certainty or making probable predictions. It may
also merely be "filler" or nonsense that, by virtue of its style or
wording, gives the impression that it actually means something. In
his essay on the subject (see Further
reading), William G. Perry called bull[shit] "relevancies,
however relevant, without data" and gave a definition of the verb
"to bull[shit]" as follows:
- To discourse upon the contexts, frames of reference and points of observation which would determine the origin, nature, and meaning of data if one had any. To present evidence of an understanding of form in the hope that the reader may be deceived into supposing a familiarity with content.
Sometimes called "shooting the shit", bullshit
can also be the act of having a very casual conversation with
little value. A lot of times, people will say "that's bullshit"
when something bad or unexpected happens.
Bullshit is also used in the popular saying "money talks, bullshit
walks" meaning that people who "do something" such as "put their
money on the table" will get more results than people who merely
talk. Making this statement indicates that the talking up to this
time has been bullshit and that it is now time to do something or
the speaker will walk away from the proposed deal.
Bullshit can also refer to excessively complex,
unreasonable, or burdensome requirements demanded of an individual
or organization by another, especially by government agencies or
other bureaucracies. For example, a contractor wishing to bid on a
government job may refer to the paperwork required to do so as
"government bullshit."
The word "horseshit" is often used in vulgar
slang as a synonym for "bullshit" to refer to nonsense. The usage of
"horseshit" (a less common term) differs slightly from "bullshit".
People may refer to their own statements and presentations as
"bullshit", as in the traditional folk saying, "If you can't
dazzle them with brilliance, baffle them with bullshit".
"Horseshit" is more often used as a reactive exclamation or
profoundly distrustful assessment.
Bullshit can also be a noun. e.g. "Don't give me
that bullshit." The common expression "Don't give me that" probably
arose as a euphemistic shortening.
"Bullshit" implies dubious credibility with an
understood lack of true malevolence, whereas "horseshit" suggests
uncompromised ignorance or deception. "Horseshit" carries with it a
certain connotation of indignation; stating that something is a
"load of horseshit" usually implies that the speaker feels somehow
cheated or wronged by the current situation, whereas calling
something "bullshit" can imply anything from indignation to a
joking and good-natured intent.
(There are several non-vulgar words nearly
equivalent with bullshit - such as: "baloney", "prevarication" and
"embellishment" that may be used on more formal occasions).
Furthermore, the exclamation "Bullshit!" can also
be used to express surprise, shock and/or humour at a truthful tale
- often because the end result of the story or incident is of such
fortune that if you didn't know any better you'd instantly assume
the tale to be fictional. The statement of "Bullshit!" in this
context is more likely followed up by a question (such as "Are you
serious?"), or combined in a question (eg. "No way! Are you
bullshitting me?"), which serves the purpose of asking the person
telling the story to reconfirm the truthfulness of the tale.
It can also be used to describe two people who
are "bullshitting" otherwise just having a small conversation about
nothing. It can also be known as shooting the bull.
"Bullshit" in philosophy
In his essay On Bullshit
(written in 1986 but not published until 2005), philosopher
Harry
Frankfurt of Princeton
University characterizes bullshit as a form of falsehood
distinct from lying. The liar, Frankfurt holds, knows and cares
about the truth, but deliberately sets out to mislead instead of
telling the truth. The "bullshitter", on the other hand, does not
care about the truth and is only seeking to impress: http://www.jelks.nu/misc/articles/bs.html
http://www.tauroscatology.com/frankfurt.htm
Frankfurt connects this analysis of bullshit with
Ludwig
Wittgenstein's disdain of "non-sense" talk, and with the
popular concept of a "bull
session" in which speakers may try out unusual views without
commitment. He fixes the blame for the prevalence of "bullshit" in
modern society upon anti-realism
and upon the growing frequency of situations in which people are
expected to speak or have opinions without appropriate knowledge of
the subject matter.
Gerald
Cohen, in "Deeper into Bullshit", contrasted the kind of
"bullshit" Frankfurt describes with a different sort: nonsense
discourse presented as sense. Cohen points out that this sort of
bullshit can be produced either accidentally or deliberately. While
some writers do deliberately produce bullshit, a person can also
aim at sense and produce nonsense by mistake; or a person deceived
by a piece of bullshit can repeat it innocently, without intent to
deceive others.
Cohen gives the example of Alan Sokal's
"Transgressing
the Boundaries" as a piece of deliberate bullshit. Sokal's aim
in creating it, however, was to point out that the "postmodernist"
editors who accepted his paper for publication could not
distinguish nonsense from sense, and thereby by implication that
their field was "bullshit".
Euphemisms
"Bullshit" has a number of euphemisms:- BS
- bull
- bull butter (alluding to something that would be as absurd as a bull producing milk/butter)
- bullcrap
- bullish (used under stock market trends)
- bullplop
- bullroar (especially when intimidation is involved)
- bullpucky
- bullshark
- bullhonkery
- bovine scat (retaining the initials)
- bovine stercus
- horsefeathers
- horse hockey
- stierenpoep (as a direct translatian of present Dutch)
- stercore tauri
Further reading
- — Halifax academic Laura Penny's study of the phenomenon of bullshit and its impact on modern society.
- — Harry Frankfurt's detailed analysis of the concept of bullshit.
- Perry, William G. (1967). Examsmanship and the Liberal Arts. Originally published in Harvard College: A Collection of Essays by Members of the Harvard Faculty.
- Holt, Jim, Say Anything, one of his Critic At Large essays from The New Yorker, (August 22, 2005)
- Eliot, T. S. Inventions of the March Hare: Poems 1909-1917 (Harcourt, 1997) ISBN 0-151002-74-6
- Royston, Chris. My Life - No Bullshit, I Actually Do Get Blank Cheques (Royston Publishers 2007)
See also
- Cow dung
- Bollocks
- Gobbledygook
- Gibberish
- Humbug
- Fisk
- Nonsense
- Tall tale
- Bullshit (game)
- Bullshit (drinking game)
- Pseudointellectualism
- Propaganda
- Fiction
- Lie
- Perverb
- bunkum
- Spin (public relations)
- Truthiness
- Tim Shadbolt - New Zealand politician arrested for using the word, later wrote an autobiography titled "Bullshit and Jellybeans"
References
bullshit in German: Bullshit
bullshit in Italian: Stronzata
bullshit in Dutch: Bullshit
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
babble,
balderdash, balls, baloney, big talk, bilge, blabber, blague, blah, blah-blah, blather, bop, bosh, bull, bunk, bunkum, claptrap, crap, drivel, drool, eyewash, fancy talk, fine talk,
fish story, flam, flapdoodle, flimflam, gabble, gammon, gas, gibber, gibble-gabble, guff, gup, highfalutin, highfaluting, hogwash, hoke, hokum, hooey, hot air, humbug, humbuggery, jabber, jiggery-pokery, malarkey, moonshine, piffle, poppycock, prate, prattle, rattle, rot, scat, shit, talk nonsense, tall story,
tall talk, tommyrot,
tripe, twaddle, twattle, vapor, waffle, wind