Tom Curran uses an obscure word that sounds like a slur, startling his co-hosts

Tom Curran uses an obscure word that sounds like a slur, startling his co-hosts
byu/BobbyThreeSticks inPatriots

43 comments
  1. I don’t care for Tom Curran, so this is hilarious. But TIL niggling is a word and it means: causing slight but persistent annoyance, discomfort, or anxiety. So sounds like he at least used it correctly.

  2. I immediately thought of “ka-niggits” from Monty Python and the Holy Grail. The was how the French taunter (John Cleese) pronounced the word “knights”

  3. Just watched an episode of Schitts Creek where Moira used it too and I had to do a double take since I was half paying attention.

  4. If any word that begins with n-I-g reminds you of something offensive, you’re the problem.

  5. It’s a perfectly cromulent word. But yea, in today’s climate people are always gonna hear it wrong and cringe, so it’s better to use something different when you’re on tv.

  6. Uh… think some of you guys are overreacting to absolutely nothing here. That’s a totally normal word that most people know and there’s no reaction at all from his co-hosts.

  7. Holy shit there are a bunch of absolute potato brained idiots in here who don’t know the word niggle or niggling.

  8. Kind of like the first time I heard a casual chinese conversation using “那个” (nèi ge).

  9. Niggling injuries, once you’re in your 30’s you have them all the time from doing nothing

  10. This is not a slur. It just sounds like the word. This is why conservatives win elections. If you don’t want that to happen, get over it.

  11. It’s not that obscure of a word…at all. Also, if it was a slur it wouldn’t even make sense in context…

  12. I’ve always wondered, as someone from the colonies, if words like niggle are less commonly used in the USA. Niggle is quite commonly used in Australia, for example a strained muscle or pain in your back could be described as a niggle or a niggling pain(and often is in a sports context).

    It could also be used to refer to some light foul play, for example some trash talk or an extra shove or digging an elbow in during a tackle is described as niggling also.

  13. It’s a pretty common word for a minor annoyance. I could imagine it had racial connotations at some point. All words have meaning.

  14. That’s hilarious — I just finished watching “True Grit” a few minutes ago, and Hailee Steinfeld’s character used the same word. Made me do a double-take.

  15. He loves to be wordy and bring up his major in English all the time. Just a nerd trying to flex to a crowd that doesnt care.

  16. It is a very common word for us in Australia, for example “I have a niggling pain in my knee”. Also common in the likes of the United Kingdom etc.

  17. It’s used in Blood Bowl, so I always thought it was a common term for certain injuries in American Football

  18. Funny as a Brit.

    We use niggle/niggling all the time. I’m not certain I’m right, but it might be because use of the similar sounding pejorative term is much rarer here.

    That’s not to say there’s no racism problem. Plenty of thick as a constipation shite arseholes here too

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