-ussification
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From -ussy (suffix denoting a type of pussy) + -fication.
Noun
[edit]-ussification (uncountable)
- (neologism) The phenomenon by which words are formed using the suffix -ussy.
- Although it has mostly died out by now, -ussification was once considered the peak of comedy.
- 2022 January 26, Bethy Squires, “We Asked Linguists Why People Are Adding -Ussy to Every Word”, in Vulture[1], archived from the original on 2024-02-02:
- In certain pockets of the internet, the -ussification of language is inescapable. Riffing off "bussy' (a portmanteau of "boy" and "pussy"), now everything is a cat or a cavity. A calzone is a pizzussy. A wine bottle has a winussy. Princess Fiona has an ogussy.
- 2022 December 27, Julia Reinstein, Ikran Dahir, Steffi Cao, “The 41 Most Defining Memes Of 2022”, in Buzzfeed News[2], archived from the original on 2023-09-28:
- Though "-ussy" took off as a meme in 2022, its origins date way further back in historussy. "Bussy" — a portmanteau of "boy pussy" — has been a queer slang term for years, showing up on Urban Dictionary as early as 2004. In 2017, -ussified words had a big moment thanks to Ditty videos. This year, the -ussification came to TikTok, particularly in the comment section before becoming all but inescapable all across the internussy. Even Lizzo sang about her Balenci-ussies.
- 2023 January 13, Mia Mercado, “I Can't Shut Up About -Ussy”, in The Cut[3], archived from the original on 2023-03-12:
- In an academic paper from the University of Montreal, linguist Michael Dow used a more political example: Thatchussy, the -ussification of Margaret Thatcher. Dow deemed this class of words "pussy blends," a phrase that deserves its own place in historussy.
- 2023 November, Kelly E[lizabeth] Wright, Benjamin Zimmer, “Among the New Words”, in American Speech, volume 98, number 4, Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press, , →ISSN, →OCLC, page 463: