I personally wouldn’t use any word like “slay” in the workplace. I think it’d be completely unnecessary.

  • MxM111@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    One would think that “hot strippers” is not acceptable in any technical professional environment. Except there are mechanical devices that strip optical fiber from the jacket/coating. The devices are called strippers. Some of those devices are heating up the coating before removing for the easiness of stripping. Those are hot strippers. And of course, MS Outlook blocks e-mails that have these words.

    • TheDoctorDonna@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      That word always sounded like it was rather self explanatory so I never looked it up before. I never realized it was specifically the disestablishment of the Church of England.

      As someone who was baptized Anglican, I am 100% an Antidisestablishmentarian.

  • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    If you don’t intuitively know which slang or curse words can be used in a given professional setting (they are not all alike), then you should avoid all profanity and slang, and speak proper English. Always err on the side of caution when your career, reputation, or important matters are at stake.

  • theluddite@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Software has more than its fair share of acronyms, which we often choose to say phonetically, like SQL gets said “sequel.” We also have the TTY, and you often have to detach things from it. Depending on the context, best to spell that one out, or just substitute “terminal,” but I’ve definitely been in meetings where someone said something about a process that needs to be detached from the titty.

    • mindbleach
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      11 months ago

      Google’s “inclusive documentation” guide highlights other… colorful choices… that emerge and proliferate on account of all computer-science experts being the same kind of complete dork. For example, variables names are alternating-caps or dash-separated instead of camel-case and kebab-case. Hierarchies should probably never have been called master versus slave. And there’s some debate for how to describe server-cluster recovery modes, but the answer is not “shoot the other node in the head.”

  • cmbabul@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Don’t say anything sexual or overtly blasphemous or curse at a customer/higher up and in my experience no one will really care. Read the room for sure but times have changed, I’ve not worked in a place with overt swearing rules in over a decade. Even in severe cases you’ll likely just be asked to tone it down

      • mindbleach
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        11 months ago

        Some languages do not have the concept of profanity, and Australia is what that would sound like in English.

  • GreyShuck@feddit.uk
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    1 year ago

    I recall hearing that one should never use a three letter word starting with ‘g’ and ending with ‘t’ (i.e. get, git, got, gut). Instead: obtain, stomach, ‘being unhelpful’ etc.

    This was before github was a thing, of course.