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Wilson Gray hwgray at GMAIL.COM
Mon Oct 8 11:18:07 UTC 2018


> "Unass" is older than this; I have heard it in use verbally since the
> mid-1990s.

unass v. to dismount or disembark (a vehicle); to get off of
(something); to unseat (someone); to leave (somewhere). Editorial
Note: This term dates back to at least the 1960s and the Vietnam War.
It is especially associated with the military, from where it has
spread to politics and aeronautics. (Nov 17, 2004
A Way with Words | unass
https://www.waywordradio.org/unass/

My personal experience is that this was used in the Army as far back
as the Korean War.
On Mon, Oct 8, 2018 at 12:35 AM Bill Mullins <amcombill at hotmail.com> wrote:
>
> The most recent updates include a lot of entries derived from ass, bum,
> butt, and the like.
>
> Included is "bums in seats" (1978), but missing is "butts in seats".
>
> _Corbin [KY] Times-Tribune_ 23 Oct 1970 p 2 col 1
>
> " "The object of the game is to put butts in the seats," said Cousy."
>
> Evanston IL _Daily Northwestern_ 7 Oct 1971 p 8 col 2
>
> "How do you get the butts in the seats?"
>
>
> And also missing is "Asscrackistan"
>
> _Rolling Stone_ 25 Jul 2002, quoted in _Slug & Lettuce_ Summer 2003, p 2
> col 2
>
> "Now while the reporting in Rolling Stone is dodgy, and superficial at
> best, this article, "Horny and Heavily Armed" (issue 901, July 25, 2002)
> was great because it portrayed military men as exactly what they are.
> In this article, the journalist Even Wright, joins an army platoon in
> garrison based in a country they call "Ass-crack-istan." "
>
> https://digitalcommons.ric.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?referer=https://www.google.com/&httpsredir=1&article=2814&context=as220_root
>
> _Prisoner Express_ Spring 2010 p. 16 col 1
>
> "Let me especially extend my apologies to the anonymous government
> employees whose brilliant idea to set this man to killing his fellow
> Arabs in Asscrackistan caused him to instead begin murdering the killers
> he was training with."
>
> https://prisonerexpress.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/2010_1_Spring.pdf
>
>
> "Unass" (to get people to get off their butts) is not included, either.
>
> _Small Arms Defense Journal_ Jan 2016  p 104 col 1
> "Defilade, enfilade, grazing fire, plunging fire, and suppressive fire
> on assault or effective cover for your platoon to unass an AO gone bad."
>
> http://machinegunarmory.com/MGAMilSite/Publications/SMDJ_vol8_no1_JANUARY_2016104-107.pdf
>
> _The Eddy Line_ Mar 2001 p 17 col 2
>
> "Footage includes Clint Rinehart demonstrating how to unass a kayak and
> swim from the hole below Left Crack and into Middle Crack's hole at 2.4
> feet."
>
> http://www.gapaddle.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/04/el200103.pdf
>
> _The Intake_ Sum 2011 p. 32
>
> "He wrote back that because he didn't have to "unass" the bird, it
> didn't fit there either."
>
> https://supersabresociety.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/Issue-16-Summer-2006.pdf
>
> ("Unass" is older than this; I have heard it in use verbally since the
> mid-1990s.)
>
>
>
> ---
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>
> ------------------------------------------------------------
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-- 
-Wilson
-----
All say, "How hard it is that we have to die!"---a strange complaint
to come from the mouths of people who have had to live.
-Mark Twain

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