What words, phrases or signs do you use and how do you get your partner’s attention?

  • @Windex007
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    841 year ago

    My wife knows that if I say “Honey, I need to do that thing with my butt” she knows I have to poop, with everyone else listening blissfully unaware.

      • @Windex007
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        291 year ago

        Ok but don’t use it in Canada I can’t risk people learning what it means around here

    • XbSuper
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      121 year ago

      That sounds so much worse than just saying you need to poop.

  • @[email protected]
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    701 year ago

    When my wife can’t remember someone’s name, she’ll grab my hand and squeeze it with two quick squeezes “Help. Me.”.

    That’s my cue to either work their name into a comment/question or, if I don’t know them, introduce myself followed by a “And you are…?”. Works pretty well all of the time.

    Of course, being together so long, and loving to fuck with each other’s heads when we can, sometimes I’ll just stand there and give them my best Aussie “owzitgoin?”, and watch my wife squirm. That’s usually when the nails dig into my hand, hoping to draw blood.

    Worth it.

  • @redeyejedi
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    661 year ago

    If we are together one of us will use the phrase “Is there Lemon in this?” And hold up our drink which is code for get me out if this conversation/situation.

    If we aren’t in the same room. We pull out our phone and text Save Me. Then the other person comes and finds you to say that So and So needs them immediately. Yadda, yadda.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 year ago

      If you did that in front of me I would pick up on it immediately, without any prior knowledge of your code.

      I swear people who use sloppy codes think the rest of us are stupid.

      • @Potatos_are_not_friends
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        101 year ago

        What a weird way to tell people that you frequently get left behind because of your personality.

  • @LrdThndr
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    631 year ago

    Both my wife and my friends know this one.

    If you ever see me drinking a Bud Light Lime, talking about Bud Light Lime, or requesting a Bud Light Lime, that means I’m likely being held against my will. Come back with the police.

      • @LrdThndr
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        171 year ago

        Never need one until you do.

        • @blazeknave
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          21 year ago

          Hahahahahahahhha This mf practicing too. I love you u/LrdThndr

        • @[email protected]
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          11 year ago

          So you keep a bud light lime on you at all times, just in case? Wont that simply result in your GF ignoring the sign, since you always have one on you?

      • @LrdThndr
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        41 year ago

        Nah, don’t need to actually have one. Just need to request one.

        “Hey man, haven’t heard from you in a while. You alright?”

        “Yeah, everything’s great man. Just sitting here drinking a Bud light lime.”

        “Bud light lime? For real?”

        “Yeah, man. Definitely a bud light lime kind of day.”

        “You need me to call the cops?”

        “Sure thing man. Thanks for checking in.”

        Hell, it doesn’t even need to be in production anymore.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 year ago

        But it’s actually not that bad… It’s not good beer but whatever it is, it’s nice 🙂

  • 1bluepixel
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    551 year ago

    My spouse and I lived in a bunch of countries over the years. We speak Quebec French, English, and Spanish, as well as a smattering of Chinese, Bulgarian, Korean, and a few odds and ends here and there.

    We basically speak whatever we think people around us won’t understand. Very colloquial Quebec French in non-French-speaking countries, Chinese around white people, Bulgarian around non-white people, or even a cryptic mix of everything when we’re not completely sure.

    We figure anyone who understands is probably someone we want to know… Hasn’t happened very often, but it does happen. So far we weren’t saying anything overly embarrassing when we got caught, but we sure as hell have no filter between us because of this!

    • Drusas
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      601 year ago

      I’ve taught my husband to speak a bit of Japanese, but we don’t use it this way because that’s extremely rude.

      • 1bluepixel
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        1 year ago

        I wouldn’t say we speak in people’s faces, but we make comments to each other about random stuff. I would never say something rude about somebody in their faces, but my spouse might go, “Can we go back to the hotel, I really need to take a shit” or something silly and unfiltered like that.

        • Drusas
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          131 year ago

          I get it, I just still think it’s rude and avoid doing so myself.

          • @[email protected]
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            41 year ago

            It’s rude for spouses to have a private conversation? Would whispering be better? Would it be better if they hid in a cupboard where no one could see them?

            • @[email protected]
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              201 year ago

              Yes, it’s generally considered rude to switch languages specifically to hide your conversation.

              It’s because most will assume you are doing it to talk shit.

              • @[email protected]
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                41 year ago

                Sure, if people suddenly switched languages and then laughed in my face, I would feel bad.

                But if it’s like the other comments in this post, and it’s a couple having a quick word about a private matter, I wouldn’t mind. It’s not like I should be a part of that conversation

              • @The_v
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                31 year ago

                This varies depending on the cultural norms of the country.

                Japanese: I have been in high level meetings with a Japanese company. As soon as I walked into the room they all switched to English. Some of their English was weak but they still made the effort. When I commented on how much I appreciated it, surprised Pikachu faces all around. They responded course they would swap, to do otherwise is rude.

                In France I have had business meetings with with 8 people around a table all of who all spoke english. 4 of them were native French speakers, 1 polish, 2 Arabic, and me the sole native English speaker. The native French speakers spoke French the entire time. They would swap to English to interrupt the English language conversation then swap back to French amongst themselve. If two or more native French speakers are together, they speak French and don’t give a fuck if they include you or not. They then act all surprised that you didn’t follow their in French conversation.

              • Subverb
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                11 year ago

                Which they are.

                Agree, it’s rude af.

                • monk
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                  14 months ago

                  Tell me you’re insecure without saying you’re insecure.

            • Drusas
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              41 year ago

              It is rude to intentionally speak in a language that the people around you don’t understand (especially if you’re doing so specifically because they don’t understand it), yes.

      • radix
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        141 year ago

        That’s probably a cultural thing, isn’t it? In diverse areas, people don’t expect to understand what they hear others say, so there’s no “Speak ___; we’re in ___” culture.

        • @AstridWipenaugh
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          331 year ago

          I’d say it’s more of a context thing. If you’re hanging out in a group of people chatting together and you code switch to speak to someone so nobody else can understand, that’s rude. If you’re just speaking to someone in another language on your own, nobody cares (except xenophobic bigots).

          • radix
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            111 year ago

            Oh, that makes sense. I didn’t consider anyone would do that.

    • digitalgadget
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      181 year ago

      I love those videos where people are caught trying to have a private conversation by someone who speaks an unexpected language! Also it’s shocking to me how many people loudly speak common dialects of Chinese and don’t expect anyone to follow… literally over a billion humans can understand Mandarin, someone is listening.

      • 1bluepixel
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        1 year ago

        Haha, I’ve caught plenty of Chinese speakers having what they presume are private conversations in my presence, and sometimes even about me. People just automatically assume non-Asians can’t speak Chinese, even when these non-Asians live in China.

        • @grabyourmotherskeys
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          61 year ago

          This happens to me sometimes as I lived in enough places that I understand a lot of common stuff in various European languages even though I don’t speak them beyond ordering a beer or whatever.

    • @[email protected]
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      41 year ago

      I mean, anyone with a brain understands that when you’re using a language nobody else understands, that you’re talking shit about people in the room.

      Doesn’t take a rocket scientist of even a bilingual to figure that out.

      • 1bluepixel
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        31 year ago

        That’s a really weird attitude. I come from a multicultural city where people speak their own language in public all the time and nobody presumes it has anything to do with them. Why would it?

        • @[email protected]
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          31 year ago

          If you’re in a social group, purposefully using a separate channel is interpreted as something the group wouldn’t approve of.

          • Digitalprimate
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            41 year ago

            My American friend group is perfectly fine if my wife and I speak the occasional Dutch in front of them. They know we’d make fun of them to their faces if we felt like it.

        • Caveman
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          11 year ago

          Probably American. They don’t understand that cultures are different. Safe to ignore lol

      • @PlutoniumAcid
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        21 year ago

        You have low expectations. Sometimes we just want to keep embarrassing stuff on the low.

  • Subverb
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    541 year ago

    The last time we were in Paris my wife and I came down with a stomach bug that gave us explosive diarrhea. Now, rather than say we have diarrhea and need to rush home we say we’re “feeling rather Parisian”.

    • @guleblanc
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      91 year ago

      Russians used to go to the sea through Latvia, during the Czarist times. They often got sea sick. A case of any kind of gastric distress became a “trip to Riga.” (I learned this in a Russian language class. It may not be true, but I intend to believe it, regardless if it’s actual truth. Please correct me if I’m wrong. I’d like to know if I’m being unreasonable. It’s a sign of strength of character )

        • Jojo
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          121 year ago

          Well obviously it doesn’t mean that in Riga. You have to go farther inland to hear it.

          • Uncle_sure
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            21 year ago

            In Russian “to throw up” sounds like "rygat’ ". So the story and the usage looks plausible (especially for some of Sant Petersburg folks).

            • Jojo
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              31 year ago

              It’s also possible it’s a hopelessly dated and archaic idiom that no modern speaker would recognize but was still fairly popular when that language course was first written, or something. It only takes a decade or two for a phrase to disappear from common usage sometimes.

              Or maybe (since it references “czarist times” the phrase was already crazy dated and old but the Russian-speaking Englishman who wrote the course saw the phrase somewhere, thought it was funny, and so put it in. Wouldn’t put that past this world of ours either.

              • Uncle_sure
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                1 year ago

                By the way, the Riga sounds like “Ryga” in Belarusian. So this idiom should not have been outdated. Just a bit artificial. But to be artificial is okay if you want to avoid direct naming of unpleasant things. I believe that “travel to Riga”=“poyekhal rygat’”=“go puke” is a meme for a lot of native Russians around Saint Petersburg.
                It’s totally ok that some teacher include that meme into their course. This is totally recognizable for a native speaker (like for me in my late thirties).

                You will be really surprised how many local silly names exist for menstruation. “Red day of the calendar” - allusion on communist holidays. “Red army arrival day” - no explanation is needed. “Relatives from Krasnodar just come” - Krasnodar is literally “Red Gift”, so it’s obvious again. “The critical days”, “these days of the calendar”… I’ve heard all these variants in the wild by my own ears.

                P.S accidentally found an independent confirmation regarding Riga https://translate.google.com/?sl=auto&tl=en&text=https%3A%2F%2Fcyberleninka.ru%2Farticle%2Fn%2Fbolezni-i-ih-frazeologicheskie-evfemisticheskie-nominatsii-v-russkom-angliyskom-nemetskom-frantsuzskom-yazykah &op=translate

                • Jojo
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                  1 year ago

                  Oh I wasn’t by any means intending to cast shade. I was just speculating on possibilities, from the phrase being more popular inland to the phrase being unheard-of for various reasons.

                  I don’t speak Russian and have never been closer to Russia than Prijedor or Zagreb, so I am by no means an authority and I’m not trying to contradict anyone.

  • @[email protected]
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    491 year ago

    “Do we have any pineapple at home?” is our safe word for social situations when one of us needs a reason to leave a situation or change the conversation because they’re uncomfortable. I detest pineapple.

  • @[email protected]
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    401 year ago

    Sign Language works pretty well.

    We picked it up when my daughter was younger and we just kept going. Now we use it to speak to each other from across the room during loud events.

      • @[email protected]
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        31 year ago

        I think in this context it just means “when around other people, generally in some group function, like a party or reunion.”

        • @Illuminostro
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          21 year ago

          It was a sarcastic joke, like I don’t understand that other people are “company.”

    • @[email protected]
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      71 year ago

      “my significant other did not address me as Mr. Bananapoopblender, something is seriously wrong!”

  • @owenfromcanada
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    371 year ago

    Dinosaur noises, typically when we’re trying to find each other.

    • @davidgro
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      161 year ago

      My dad would meow loudly when him and my mom got separated while shopping. Mom would rush over as fast as possible to shut him up.

      • @The_v
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        61 year ago

        My wife would pretend she doesn’t know me go the other direction.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    If I tell my partner that something drains the color out of a room, she knows that whomever I’m talking to is a bigot/phobe and we leave. More often than not though, she’ll ask me who it is and tell them off.

  • @[email protected]
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    361 year ago

    Instead of spelling it out or code, my wife and I will use increasingly obscure synonyms to hide our conversations from the kids.

    They figured out “frozen confection” meant ice cream, so I need a new one.

    • @MajorHavoc
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      171 year ago

      I do this as well. I can’t say I’ve kept a lot of secrets, but at least the kids have a large vocabulary.

      • @Rukmer
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        31 year ago

        This is how we started too, but as our kid gets older it just all becomes part of his vocabulary. He already has a really peculiar vocabulary to begin with so add our code words to it and it’s just… very interesting.

      • @scutiger
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        141 year ago

        Lacto-saccharine sounds better