fratire

English

Etymology

Blend of frat + satire

Noun

fratire (uncountable)

  1. A politically incorrect and overtly masculine style of non-fiction written for and marketed to young men.
    • 2013, "Michael Press", Re: maybe this is how I should have gotten married.... (on newsgroup rec.sport.football.college)
      It is up to you to prove that guy did not use mathematics in his livelihood. he wrote a comedy/fratire book.....that doesn't require mathematics to do.
    • 2013, "Alec Zorab", Re: [scala-functional] Re: Math doesn't suck, you do. (on newsgroup scala-functional)
      For those who have never encountered Maddox before: This is the website of a man who made himself successful in the early 200X's by writing a kind of vitriolic, shouty, bro-lit/fratire. Particularly famous is his fan mail response where he mocks children's artwork []

Anagrams

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.