lorin

 

Pidgin Signs

Page history last edited by lorin 2 yrs ago

http://abc.go.com/primetime/greysanatomy/

 

 

 

 

http://www.youtube.com/v/2UR5Wnwv0iM&rel=1">

 

 

 

 

Grey's Anatomy Catchphrases

Now you too can speak like the doctors at Seattle Grace...from wikipedia.com
A trend began of "McLabeling" characters or adding "Mc" to other terms

1. McDreamy: the first of this trend is a nickname given to Derek Shepherd by Cristina Yang

2. McMarried: said by George O'Malley after Meredith Grey finds out that McDreamy is married

3. McSteamy: Mark Sloan is given this nickname by the female interns. Before picking the name, the female interns were thinking about using McSexy and McYummy. This idea may have come from the episode "Into You Like a Train" when a nurse, Tyler, tells Meredith "McSteamy" came looking for her. He was mistaken for McDreamy.

4. McHot: Addison Shepherd is given this nickname by Alex Karev

5. McYeah: George agrees with Alex when he calls Addison McHot

6. McDog: the dog shared by McDreamy and Meredith

7. McLife: according to Meredith, after getting her McDreamy and McDog, Addison now has Meredith's "McLife"

8. McVet: given to veterinarian Finn Dandridge

9. McVomit: something George says he is holding back as female interns discuss other McNicknames

10. McGuilty: Cristina calls Derek this for having sex with Meredith and then asking her what their encounter meant.

11. McBaby: Cristina says this to Meredith while she's getting examined, because of her suspected pregnancy symptoms.

12: McFricking Cone of Silence

13: McDreamy was doing the McNasty with McHottie? That McBastard!

 

Euphemisms for female genitalia or other sexually related terms

1. Va-jay-jay: Dr. Bailey's euphemism for vagina

2. My good girl: A supporting character called her genitalia "my good girl" in the episode Damage Case.

3. V-card: Chief Webber's wife Adele (Loretta Devine) used the phrase "cashing in her V-card" to describe her niece losing her virginity in the second-season finale.

 

The characters often say "seriously," usually at the end of a sentence, as a question or as a pronouncement.

Creator Shonda Rhimes explains that one of the writers used the saying all the time and it spread to the writing staff, and eventually, to the dialogue.

 

Whatever...

Meredith often uses well-known phrases but trails off at the end and replaces the last word with "whatever": "There's too much water under the thing or whatever", "You are not my knight in shining whatever", and "I had a near-death whatever".

Comments (0)

You don't have permission to comment on this page.