djadonis206 wrote:Kodama wrote:djadonis206 wrote:
Did I spell "extremist" wrong? Or use it the wrong way?
Seriously, a person who exercises their 1st amendment rights to stand on a street corner and hold up a sign is an extremist just because you don't agree with them and there's not a TV playing an episode of SP that makes you feel better about yourself at that moment?
What's extreme about a guy standing on the corner with a pictures of slaughtered and a guy who posts pictures of dead babies is the shock value
it has nothing to do with the 1st amendmant or south park -
graphic uncomfortable pictures or words are extreme -
but I can't draw a connection between my use of the word extreme and how you use the word abuse
I disagree with grey's anatomy but wouldn't call the show extreme -
I disagree with ugly betty but wouldn't call the show extreme -
sometimes I even disagree with matt and trey but I wouldn't call the show extreme -
but just to clarify
ex·treme /ɪkˈstrim/ Pronunciation Key - Show Spelled Pronunciation[ik-streem] Pronunciation Key - Show IPA Pronunciation adjective, -trem·er, -trem·est, noun
–adjective 1. of a character or kind farthest removed from the ordinary or average: extreme measures.
2. utmost or exceedingly great in degree: extreme joy.
3. farthest from the center or middle; outermost; endmost: the extreme limits of a town.
4. farthest, utmost, or very far in any direction: an object at the extreme point of vision.
5. exceeding the bounds of moderation: extreme fashions.
6. going to the utmost or very great lengths in action, habit, opinion, etc.: an extreme conservative.
7. last or final: extreme hopes.
8. Chiefly Sports. extremely dangerous or difficult: extreme skiing.
–noun 9. the utmost or highest degree, or a very high degree: cautious to an extreme.
10. one of two things as remote or different from each other as possible: the extremes of joy and grief.
11. the furthest or utmost length; an excessive length, beyond the ordinary or average: extremes in dress.
12. an extreme act, measure, condition, etc.: the extreme of poverty.
13. Mathematics. a. the first or the last term, as of a proportion or series.
b. a relative maximum or relative minimum value of a function in a given region.
14. Logic. the subject or the predicate of the conclusion of a syllogism; either of two terms that are separated in the premises and brought together in the conclusion.
15. Archaic. the utmost point, or extremity, of something.