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>>71138
>К стому же, "осёл" потому и "задница", что стоит, никуда не едет и всё что ты видишь - задница. И сроки горят. И вообще все планы в задницу. В эту задницу.
Ass это скорее всего американизированное British English "arse". А arse - это задница на древне/протонемецком
>ass (1) Look up ass at Dictionary.com
>beast of burden, O.E. assa (Old Northumbrian assal, assald) "he-ass," probably from O.Celt. *as(s)in "donkey," which (with Ger. esel, Goth. asilus, Lith. asilas, O.C.S. osl) is ultimately from L. asinus, probably of Middle Eastern origin (cf. Sumerian ansu). Since ancient Greek times, in fables and parables, the animal typified clumsiness and stupidity (hence asshead, late 15c., etc.). To make an ass of oneself is from 1580s. Asses' Bridge (c.1780), from L. Pons Asinorum, is fifth proposition of first book of Euclid's "Elements."
>ass (2) Look up ass at Dictionary.com
>slang for "backside," first attested 1860 in nautical slang, in popular use from 1930; chiefly U.S.; from dialectal variant pronunciation of arse (q.v.). The loss of -r- before -s- attested in several other words (e.g. burst/bust, curse/cuss, horse/hoss, barse/bass). Indirect evidence of the change from arse to ass can be traced to 1785 (in euphemistic avoidance of ass "donkey" by polite speakers) and perhaps to Shakespeare, if Nick Bottom transformed into a donkey in "A Midsummer Night's Dream" (1594) is the word-play some think it is. Meaning "woman regarded as a sexual object" is from 1942. Colloquial (one's) ass "one's self, one's person" attested by 1958.
also,
>donkey Look up donkey at Dictionary.com
>1785, originally slang, perhaps a dim. from dun "dull grey-brown," the form perhaps influenced by monkey. Or possibly from a familiar form of Duncan (cf. dobbin). The older English word was ass.
олсо я вообще нихуя не понял о чем мы тут дискутируем
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