Noun to express the frustration of being behind a small group of cars that's driving more slowly than necessary
Sometimes when driving around town I'll encounter a small clog of slow-moving traffic driving slower than the speed limit, where I simply can't pass them. There's no traffic jam, accident, road construction, funeral procession, ulterior motives, etc, they're simply a random convergence of Sunday drivers. The only thing to do is wait until one of them turns.
I'm looking for a noun to describe the frustrating situation of being stuck behind them. It should work in the sentence "Well this is going to be a(n) ____________". Please don't suggest anything profane or indecent.
So far I've come up with "long haul", but I'm not sure the connotations are right, and I'm hoping for something that reveals more frustration than that.
EDIT: I'm looking for something that indicates both slowness and frustration and not just frustration alone, my mistake for not being more clear. Even better if it's somehow driving/transportation/movement related.
phrase-requests
|
show 2 more comments
Sometimes when driving around town I'll encounter a small clog of slow-moving traffic driving slower than the speed limit, where I simply can't pass them. There's no traffic jam, accident, road construction, funeral procession, ulterior motives, etc, they're simply a random convergence of Sunday drivers. The only thing to do is wait until one of them turns.
I'm looking for a noun to describe the frustrating situation of being stuck behind them. It should work in the sentence "Well this is going to be a(n) ____________". Please don't suggest anything profane or indecent.
So far I've come up with "long haul", but I'm not sure the connotations are right, and I'm hoping for something that reveals more frustration than that.
EDIT: I'm looking for something that indicates both slowness and frustration and not just frustration alone, my mistake for not being more clear. Even better if it's somehow driving/transportation/movement related.
phrase-requests
1
Slow boat? (Usually it's a slow boat to nowhere, but you can skip that part in this case).
– Dan Bron
Nov 11 '18 at 17:44
Please add that as an answer. It's my favorite so far.
– calamari
Nov 11 '18 at 18:51
1
Here in Indiana USA I've heard this referred to as "Hoosier Parade", and it's not a compliment! Not a general term however...
– Bryan Hanson
Nov 11 '18 at 22:47
2
@BryanHanson Rather surprised that’s used in Indiana. Sounds more like the kind of expression you’d be likely to hear in Michigan or Illinois or Ohio.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
Nov 12 '18 at 0:34
@JanusBahsJacquet Well, I think the guy I first heard it from hailed from Chicago, so that makes sense.
– Bryan Hanson
Nov 12 '18 at 0:41
|
show 2 more comments
Sometimes when driving around town I'll encounter a small clog of slow-moving traffic driving slower than the speed limit, where I simply can't pass them. There's no traffic jam, accident, road construction, funeral procession, ulterior motives, etc, they're simply a random convergence of Sunday drivers. The only thing to do is wait until one of them turns.
I'm looking for a noun to describe the frustrating situation of being stuck behind them. It should work in the sentence "Well this is going to be a(n) ____________". Please don't suggest anything profane or indecent.
So far I've come up with "long haul", but I'm not sure the connotations are right, and I'm hoping for something that reveals more frustration than that.
EDIT: I'm looking for something that indicates both slowness and frustration and not just frustration alone, my mistake for not being more clear. Even better if it's somehow driving/transportation/movement related.
phrase-requests
Sometimes when driving around town I'll encounter a small clog of slow-moving traffic driving slower than the speed limit, where I simply can't pass them. There's no traffic jam, accident, road construction, funeral procession, ulterior motives, etc, they're simply a random convergence of Sunday drivers. The only thing to do is wait until one of them turns.
I'm looking for a noun to describe the frustrating situation of being stuck behind them. It should work in the sentence "Well this is going to be a(n) ____________". Please don't suggest anything profane or indecent.
So far I've come up with "long haul", but I'm not sure the connotations are right, and I'm hoping for something that reveals more frustration than that.
EDIT: I'm looking for something that indicates both slowness and frustration and not just frustration alone, my mistake for not being more clear. Even better if it's somehow driving/transportation/movement related.
phrase-requests
phrase-requests
edited Nov 11 '18 at 19:00
calamari
asked Nov 11 '18 at 17:37
calamaricalamari
315
315
1
Slow boat? (Usually it's a slow boat to nowhere, but you can skip that part in this case).
– Dan Bron
Nov 11 '18 at 17:44
Please add that as an answer. It's my favorite so far.
– calamari
Nov 11 '18 at 18:51
1
Here in Indiana USA I've heard this referred to as "Hoosier Parade", and it's not a compliment! Not a general term however...
– Bryan Hanson
Nov 11 '18 at 22:47
2
@BryanHanson Rather surprised that’s used in Indiana. Sounds more like the kind of expression you’d be likely to hear in Michigan or Illinois or Ohio.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
Nov 12 '18 at 0:34
@JanusBahsJacquet Well, I think the guy I first heard it from hailed from Chicago, so that makes sense.
– Bryan Hanson
Nov 12 '18 at 0:41
|
show 2 more comments
1
Slow boat? (Usually it's a slow boat to nowhere, but you can skip that part in this case).
– Dan Bron
Nov 11 '18 at 17:44
Please add that as an answer. It's my favorite so far.
– calamari
Nov 11 '18 at 18:51
1
Here in Indiana USA I've heard this referred to as "Hoosier Parade", and it's not a compliment! Not a general term however...
– Bryan Hanson
Nov 11 '18 at 22:47
2
@BryanHanson Rather surprised that’s used in Indiana. Sounds more like the kind of expression you’d be likely to hear in Michigan or Illinois or Ohio.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
Nov 12 '18 at 0:34
@JanusBahsJacquet Well, I think the guy I first heard it from hailed from Chicago, so that makes sense.
– Bryan Hanson
Nov 12 '18 at 0:41
1
1
Slow boat? (Usually it's a slow boat to nowhere, but you can skip that part in this case).
– Dan Bron
Nov 11 '18 at 17:44
Slow boat? (Usually it's a slow boat to nowhere, but you can skip that part in this case).
– Dan Bron
Nov 11 '18 at 17:44
Please add that as an answer. It's my favorite so far.
– calamari
Nov 11 '18 at 18:51
Please add that as an answer. It's my favorite so far.
– calamari
Nov 11 '18 at 18:51
1
1
Here in Indiana USA I've heard this referred to as "Hoosier Parade", and it's not a compliment! Not a general term however...
– Bryan Hanson
Nov 11 '18 at 22:47
Here in Indiana USA I've heard this referred to as "Hoosier Parade", and it's not a compliment! Not a general term however...
– Bryan Hanson
Nov 11 '18 at 22:47
2
2
@BryanHanson Rather surprised that’s used in Indiana. Sounds more like the kind of expression you’d be likely to hear in Michigan or Illinois or Ohio.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
Nov 12 '18 at 0:34
@BryanHanson Rather surprised that’s used in Indiana. Sounds more like the kind of expression you’d be likely to hear in Michigan or Illinois or Ohio.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
Nov 12 '18 at 0:34
@JanusBahsJacquet Well, I think the guy I first heard it from hailed from Chicago, so that makes sense.
– Bryan Hanson
Nov 12 '18 at 0:41
@JanusBahsJacquet Well, I think the guy I first heard it from hailed from Chicago, so that makes sense.
– Bryan Hanson
Nov 12 '18 at 0:41
|
show 2 more comments
6 Answers
6
active
oldest
votes
At your request, I propose:
Slow boat [to China]
On a slow boat to China
On a course or trajectory that will take a very long amount of time, especially with the conclusion or destination being uncertain.
from The Free Dictionary
I've put the "in China" in brackets, suggesting you drop it, because that element pertains to the second (unbolded) part of the definition above, i.e. that the destination is uncertain. This is also why the phrase is sometimes rendered "a slow boat to nowhere".
But in a car trip, your destination is certain. It's the amount of time you want to focus on, not the uncertainty of the destination, which doesn't apply in that scenario.
The phrase actually has an interesting history. We read in the same source:
A very long time. A poker players' expression for a player who constantly lost was “I'd like to get you on a slow boat to China,” meaning that the others would have all the time in the world to win the guy's money.
Composer Frank Loesser used the phrase as the title and the first line of a 1948 romantic ballad, and the expression started being used as a compliment.
The Wikipedia link about about the 1948 song describes a biography of Frank Loesser, its composer, written by his daughter. It pithily captures her conclusion about her father and his buddies’ coinage (or usage) of the phrase:
The idea being that a "slow boat to China" was the longest trip one could imagine.
add a comment |
a drag
A tedious experience, a bore, as in After several thousand times,
signing your autograph can be a drag. This seemingly modern term was
army slang during the Civil War. The allusion probably is to drag as
something that impedes progress. [Colloquial; mid-1800s]
1
Dragisastressisaburden nearest root I can think of is the net behind a boat or a plough/sledge behind an animal both impeding progress of the one in front so I would tend to say bother but that's possibly coloquial
– KJO
Nov 11 '18 at 18:15
This would be my choice -- it seems fortuitously appropriate in this case.
– StoneyB
Nov 11 '18 at 18:43
@KJO I get your point and plus one for the humour, but I don't think the Soldiers in the Civil War did much ploughing or sleigh riding. I've looked further a bit, but can't find the specific thing they might have been dragging. Maybe artillery, if there aren't the blacksmiths/coopers to repair the broken wheels. Hell, if you can find it write a better answer!
– Duckisaduckisaduck
Nov 12 '18 at 2:49
Just conjecture but didn't the Indigenous Natives and Cavelry pull stretchers with wounded etc or is that just me watching too many John Wayne movies ?
– KJO
Nov 12 '18 at 2:52
@KJO I think you may have it. Kicking myself for not thinking of it now.
– Duckisaduckisaduck
Nov 12 '18 at 3:00
|
show 1 more comment
This is going to be a pain.
This is going to be a bore.
This is going be a drag.
This is going to be a fag. !!
(Note: This only works in British English. In AmE it would probably be considered offensive because the word has a different meaning. See note below.)
NOTE
Fag
NOUN
British
- informal in singular A tiring or unwelcome task.
‘it's too much of a fag to drive all the way there and back again’
https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/fag
And here I thought it was a cigarette.
– Scott
Nov 12 '18 at 1:41
I've heard a variant with 'faff' instead of 'fag'; I don't know if that's a regional thing? The meaning is similar to 'a hassle'.
– DaveMongoose
Nov 12 '18 at 12:01
add a comment |
My first thought was at a snail's pace but that won't fit neatly in your example sentence (though it is relevant to the scenario). I couldn't find anything else closer in the mainstream dictionaries but thought you are caught in a snail race and got lucky with Urban Dictionary.
Well this is going to be a snail race.
Urban Dictionary:
snail race
When two semi trucks are taking up both lanes on a freeway and both
are going at least five miles under the speed limit but one is going
slightly faster than the other.
Passenger: Dude the speed limit is 70 why are you only going 60.
Driver: Those two semi's are in a snail race, i can't get by them.
add a comment |
a bummer! TFD
- an unpleasant or disappointing experience
As in:
"Well this is going to be a bummer".
add a comment |
Someone staying in a left lane at the same speed and distance as a car in the right lane, thus preventing you from passing, is sometimes called a formation flyer (no citation, but I've heard it), named after a flight formation of airplanes. Actually, the term can apply to cars in all lanes, if they make no attempt to enable those behind to pass.
So I'd coin the phrase formation-flyers frustration for the feeling you describe.
1
Care to explain the downvote?
– Drew
Nov 12 '18 at 5:58
The OP states: 'It should work in the sentence "Well this is going to be a ___"', which this phrase does not.
– DaveMongoose
Nov 12 '18 at 12:02
1
@DaveMongoose: I think it does work in that sentence - as well as anything else that means some kind of a frustration. But yes, it's a noun phrase and not a noun. And yes, it's newly minted.
– Drew
Nov 12 '18 at 16:06
add a comment |
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6 Answers
6
active
oldest
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6 Answers
6
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
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active
oldest
votes
At your request, I propose:
Slow boat [to China]
On a slow boat to China
On a course or trajectory that will take a very long amount of time, especially with the conclusion or destination being uncertain.
from The Free Dictionary
I've put the "in China" in brackets, suggesting you drop it, because that element pertains to the second (unbolded) part of the definition above, i.e. that the destination is uncertain. This is also why the phrase is sometimes rendered "a slow boat to nowhere".
But in a car trip, your destination is certain. It's the amount of time you want to focus on, not the uncertainty of the destination, which doesn't apply in that scenario.
The phrase actually has an interesting history. We read in the same source:
A very long time. A poker players' expression for a player who constantly lost was “I'd like to get you on a slow boat to China,” meaning that the others would have all the time in the world to win the guy's money.
Composer Frank Loesser used the phrase as the title and the first line of a 1948 romantic ballad, and the expression started being used as a compliment.
The Wikipedia link about about the 1948 song describes a biography of Frank Loesser, its composer, written by his daughter. It pithily captures her conclusion about her father and his buddies’ coinage (or usage) of the phrase:
The idea being that a "slow boat to China" was the longest trip one could imagine.
add a comment |
At your request, I propose:
Slow boat [to China]
On a slow boat to China
On a course or trajectory that will take a very long amount of time, especially with the conclusion or destination being uncertain.
from The Free Dictionary
I've put the "in China" in brackets, suggesting you drop it, because that element pertains to the second (unbolded) part of the definition above, i.e. that the destination is uncertain. This is also why the phrase is sometimes rendered "a slow boat to nowhere".
But in a car trip, your destination is certain. It's the amount of time you want to focus on, not the uncertainty of the destination, which doesn't apply in that scenario.
The phrase actually has an interesting history. We read in the same source:
A very long time. A poker players' expression for a player who constantly lost was “I'd like to get you on a slow boat to China,” meaning that the others would have all the time in the world to win the guy's money.
Composer Frank Loesser used the phrase as the title and the first line of a 1948 romantic ballad, and the expression started being used as a compliment.
The Wikipedia link about about the 1948 song describes a biography of Frank Loesser, its composer, written by his daughter. It pithily captures her conclusion about her father and his buddies’ coinage (or usage) of the phrase:
The idea being that a "slow boat to China" was the longest trip one could imagine.
add a comment |
At your request, I propose:
Slow boat [to China]
On a slow boat to China
On a course or trajectory that will take a very long amount of time, especially with the conclusion or destination being uncertain.
from The Free Dictionary
I've put the "in China" in brackets, suggesting you drop it, because that element pertains to the second (unbolded) part of the definition above, i.e. that the destination is uncertain. This is also why the phrase is sometimes rendered "a slow boat to nowhere".
But in a car trip, your destination is certain. It's the amount of time you want to focus on, not the uncertainty of the destination, which doesn't apply in that scenario.
The phrase actually has an interesting history. We read in the same source:
A very long time. A poker players' expression for a player who constantly lost was “I'd like to get you on a slow boat to China,” meaning that the others would have all the time in the world to win the guy's money.
Composer Frank Loesser used the phrase as the title and the first line of a 1948 romantic ballad, and the expression started being used as a compliment.
The Wikipedia link about about the 1948 song describes a biography of Frank Loesser, its composer, written by his daughter. It pithily captures her conclusion about her father and his buddies’ coinage (or usage) of the phrase:
The idea being that a "slow boat to China" was the longest trip one could imagine.
At your request, I propose:
Slow boat [to China]
On a slow boat to China
On a course or trajectory that will take a very long amount of time, especially with the conclusion or destination being uncertain.
from The Free Dictionary
I've put the "in China" in brackets, suggesting you drop it, because that element pertains to the second (unbolded) part of the definition above, i.e. that the destination is uncertain. This is also why the phrase is sometimes rendered "a slow boat to nowhere".
But in a car trip, your destination is certain. It's the amount of time you want to focus on, not the uncertainty of the destination, which doesn't apply in that scenario.
The phrase actually has an interesting history. We read in the same source:
A very long time. A poker players' expression for a player who constantly lost was “I'd like to get you on a slow boat to China,” meaning that the others would have all the time in the world to win the guy's money.
Composer Frank Loesser used the phrase as the title and the first line of a 1948 romantic ballad, and the expression started being used as a compliment.
The Wikipedia link about about the 1948 song describes a biography of Frank Loesser, its composer, written by his daughter. It pithily captures her conclusion about her father and his buddies’ coinage (or usage) of the phrase:
The idea being that a "slow boat to China" was the longest trip one could imagine.
edited Nov 11 '18 at 22:56
answered Nov 11 '18 at 19:17
Dan BronDan Bron
26.1k1286122
26.1k1286122
add a comment |
add a comment |
a drag
A tedious experience, a bore, as in After several thousand times,
signing your autograph can be a drag. This seemingly modern term was
army slang during the Civil War. The allusion probably is to drag as
something that impedes progress. [Colloquial; mid-1800s]
1
Dragisastressisaburden nearest root I can think of is the net behind a boat or a plough/sledge behind an animal both impeding progress of the one in front so I would tend to say bother but that's possibly coloquial
– KJO
Nov 11 '18 at 18:15
This would be my choice -- it seems fortuitously appropriate in this case.
– StoneyB
Nov 11 '18 at 18:43
@KJO I get your point and plus one for the humour, but I don't think the Soldiers in the Civil War did much ploughing or sleigh riding. I've looked further a bit, but can't find the specific thing they might have been dragging. Maybe artillery, if there aren't the blacksmiths/coopers to repair the broken wheels. Hell, if you can find it write a better answer!
– Duckisaduckisaduck
Nov 12 '18 at 2:49
Just conjecture but didn't the Indigenous Natives and Cavelry pull stretchers with wounded etc or is that just me watching too many John Wayne movies ?
– KJO
Nov 12 '18 at 2:52
@KJO I think you may have it. Kicking myself for not thinking of it now.
– Duckisaduckisaduck
Nov 12 '18 at 3:00
|
show 1 more comment
a drag
A tedious experience, a bore, as in After several thousand times,
signing your autograph can be a drag. This seemingly modern term was
army slang during the Civil War. The allusion probably is to drag as
something that impedes progress. [Colloquial; mid-1800s]
1
Dragisastressisaburden nearest root I can think of is the net behind a boat or a plough/sledge behind an animal both impeding progress of the one in front so I would tend to say bother but that's possibly coloquial
– KJO
Nov 11 '18 at 18:15
This would be my choice -- it seems fortuitously appropriate in this case.
– StoneyB
Nov 11 '18 at 18:43
@KJO I get your point and plus one for the humour, but I don't think the Soldiers in the Civil War did much ploughing or sleigh riding. I've looked further a bit, but can't find the specific thing they might have been dragging. Maybe artillery, if there aren't the blacksmiths/coopers to repair the broken wheels. Hell, if you can find it write a better answer!
– Duckisaduckisaduck
Nov 12 '18 at 2:49
Just conjecture but didn't the Indigenous Natives and Cavelry pull stretchers with wounded etc or is that just me watching too many John Wayne movies ?
– KJO
Nov 12 '18 at 2:52
@KJO I think you may have it. Kicking myself for not thinking of it now.
– Duckisaduckisaduck
Nov 12 '18 at 3:00
|
show 1 more comment
a drag
A tedious experience, a bore, as in After several thousand times,
signing your autograph can be a drag. This seemingly modern term was
army slang during the Civil War. The allusion probably is to drag as
something that impedes progress. [Colloquial; mid-1800s]
a drag
A tedious experience, a bore, as in After several thousand times,
signing your autograph can be a drag. This seemingly modern term was
army slang during the Civil War. The allusion probably is to drag as
something that impedes progress. [Colloquial; mid-1800s]
answered Nov 11 '18 at 18:00
DuckisaduckisaduckDuckisaduckisaduck
1,294716
1,294716
1
Dragisastressisaburden nearest root I can think of is the net behind a boat or a plough/sledge behind an animal both impeding progress of the one in front so I would tend to say bother but that's possibly coloquial
– KJO
Nov 11 '18 at 18:15
This would be my choice -- it seems fortuitously appropriate in this case.
– StoneyB
Nov 11 '18 at 18:43
@KJO I get your point and plus one for the humour, but I don't think the Soldiers in the Civil War did much ploughing or sleigh riding. I've looked further a bit, but can't find the specific thing they might have been dragging. Maybe artillery, if there aren't the blacksmiths/coopers to repair the broken wheels. Hell, if you can find it write a better answer!
– Duckisaduckisaduck
Nov 12 '18 at 2:49
Just conjecture but didn't the Indigenous Natives and Cavelry pull stretchers with wounded etc or is that just me watching too many John Wayne movies ?
– KJO
Nov 12 '18 at 2:52
@KJO I think you may have it. Kicking myself for not thinking of it now.
– Duckisaduckisaduck
Nov 12 '18 at 3:00
|
show 1 more comment
1
Dragisastressisaburden nearest root I can think of is the net behind a boat or a plough/sledge behind an animal both impeding progress of the one in front so I would tend to say bother but that's possibly coloquial
– KJO
Nov 11 '18 at 18:15
This would be my choice -- it seems fortuitously appropriate in this case.
– StoneyB
Nov 11 '18 at 18:43
@KJO I get your point and plus one for the humour, but I don't think the Soldiers in the Civil War did much ploughing or sleigh riding. I've looked further a bit, but can't find the specific thing they might have been dragging. Maybe artillery, if there aren't the blacksmiths/coopers to repair the broken wheels. Hell, if you can find it write a better answer!
– Duckisaduckisaduck
Nov 12 '18 at 2:49
Just conjecture but didn't the Indigenous Natives and Cavelry pull stretchers with wounded etc or is that just me watching too many John Wayne movies ?
– KJO
Nov 12 '18 at 2:52
@KJO I think you may have it. Kicking myself for not thinking of it now.
– Duckisaduckisaduck
Nov 12 '18 at 3:00
1
1
Dragisastressisaburden nearest root I can think of is the net behind a boat or a plough/sledge behind an animal both impeding progress of the one in front so I would tend to say bother but that's possibly coloquial
– KJO
Nov 11 '18 at 18:15
Dragisastressisaburden nearest root I can think of is the net behind a boat or a plough/sledge behind an animal both impeding progress of the one in front so I would tend to say bother but that's possibly coloquial
– KJO
Nov 11 '18 at 18:15
This would be my choice -- it seems fortuitously appropriate in this case.
– StoneyB
Nov 11 '18 at 18:43
This would be my choice -- it seems fortuitously appropriate in this case.
– StoneyB
Nov 11 '18 at 18:43
@KJO I get your point and plus one for the humour, but I don't think the Soldiers in the Civil War did much ploughing or sleigh riding. I've looked further a bit, but can't find the specific thing they might have been dragging. Maybe artillery, if there aren't the blacksmiths/coopers to repair the broken wheels. Hell, if you can find it write a better answer!
– Duckisaduckisaduck
Nov 12 '18 at 2:49
@KJO I get your point and plus one for the humour, but I don't think the Soldiers in the Civil War did much ploughing or sleigh riding. I've looked further a bit, but can't find the specific thing they might have been dragging. Maybe artillery, if there aren't the blacksmiths/coopers to repair the broken wheels. Hell, if you can find it write a better answer!
– Duckisaduckisaduck
Nov 12 '18 at 2:49
Just conjecture but didn't the Indigenous Natives and Cavelry pull stretchers with wounded etc or is that just me watching too many John Wayne movies ?
– KJO
Nov 12 '18 at 2:52
Just conjecture but didn't the Indigenous Natives and Cavelry pull stretchers with wounded etc or is that just me watching too many John Wayne movies ?
– KJO
Nov 12 '18 at 2:52
@KJO I think you may have it. Kicking myself for not thinking of it now.
– Duckisaduckisaduck
Nov 12 '18 at 3:00
@KJO I think you may have it. Kicking myself for not thinking of it now.
– Duckisaduckisaduck
Nov 12 '18 at 3:00
|
show 1 more comment
This is going to be a pain.
This is going to be a bore.
This is going be a drag.
This is going to be a fag. !!
(Note: This only works in British English. In AmE it would probably be considered offensive because the word has a different meaning. See note below.)
NOTE
Fag
NOUN
British
- informal in singular A tiring or unwelcome task.
‘it's too much of a fag to drive all the way there and back again’
https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/fag
And here I thought it was a cigarette.
– Scott
Nov 12 '18 at 1:41
I've heard a variant with 'faff' instead of 'fag'; I don't know if that's a regional thing? The meaning is similar to 'a hassle'.
– DaveMongoose
Nov 12 '18 at 12:01
add a comment |
This is going to be a pain.
This is going to be a bore.
This is going be a drag.
This is going to be a fag. !!
(Note: This only works in British English. In AmE it would probably be considered offensive because the word has a different meaning. See note below.)
NOTE
Fag
NOUN
British
- informal in singular A tiring or unwelcome task.
‘it's too much of a fag to drive all the way there and back again’
https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/fag
And here I thought it was a cigarette.
– Scott
Nov 12 '18 at 1:41
I've heard a variant with 'faff' instead of 'fag'; I don't know if that's a regional thing? The meaning is similar to 'a hassle'.
– DaveMongoose
Nov 12 '18 at 12:01
add a comment |
This is going to be a pain.
This is going to be a bore.
This is going be a drag.
This is going to be a fag. !!
(Note: This only works in British English. In AmE it would probably be considered offensive because the word has a different meaning. See note below.)
NOTE
Fag
NOUN
British
- informal in singular A tiring or unwelcome task.
‘it's too much of a fag to drive all the way there and back again’
https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/fag
This is going to be a pain.
This is going to be a bore.
This is going be a drag.
This is going to be a fag. !!
(Note: This only works in British English. In AmE it would probably be considered offensive because the word has a different meaning. See note below.)
NOTE
Fag
NOUN
British
- informal in singular A tiring or unwelcome task.
‘it's too much of a fag to drive all the way there and back again’
https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/fag
answered Nov 11 '18 at 18:24
chasly from UKchasly from UK
23.4k13172
23.4k13172
And here I thought it was a cigarette.
– Scott
Nov 12 '18 at 1:41
I've heard a variant with 'faff' instead of 'fag'; I don't know if that's a regional thing? The meaning is similar to 'a hassle'.
– DaveMongoose
Nov 12 '18 at 12:01
add a comment |
And here I thought it was a cigarette.
– Scott
Nov 12 '18 at 1:41
I've heard a variant with 'faff' instead of 'fag'; I don't know if that's a regional thing? The meaning is similar to 'a hassle'.
– DaveMongoose
Nov 12 '18 at 12:01
And here I thought it was a cigarette.
– Scott
Nov 12 '18 at 1:41
And here I thought it was a cigarette.
– Scott
Nov 12 '18 at 1:41
I've heard a variant with 'faff' instead of 'fag'; I don't know if that's a regional thing? The meaning is similar to 'a hassle'.
– DaveMongoose
Nov 12 '18 at 12:01
I've heard a variant with 'faff' instead of 'fag'; I don't know if that's a regional thing? The meaning is similar to 'a hassle'.
– DaveMongoose
Nov 12 '18 at 12:01
add a comment |
My first thought was at a snail's pace but that won't fit neatly in your example sentence (though it is relevant to the scenario). I couldn't find anything else closer in the mainstream dictionaries but thought you are caught in a snail race and got lucky with Urban Dictionary.
Well this is going to be a snail race.
Urban Dictionary:
snail race
When two semi trucks are taking up both lanes on a freeway and both
are going at least five miles under the speed limit but one is going
slightly faster than the other.
Passenger: Dude the speed limit is 70 why are you only going 60.
Driver: Those two semi's are in a snail race, i can't get by them.
add a comment |
My first thought was at a snail's pace but that won't fit neatly in your example sentence (though it is relevant to the scenario). I couldn't find anything else closer in the mainstream dictionaries but thought you are caught in a snail race and got lucky with Urban Dictionary.
Well this is going to be a snail race.
Urban Dictionary:
snail race
When two semi trucks are taking up both lanes on a freeway and both
are going at least five miles under the speed limit but one is going
slightly faster than the other.
Passenger: Dude the speed limit is 70 why are you only going 60.
Driver: Those two semi's are in a snail race, i can't get by them.
add a comment |
My first thought was at a snail's pace but that won't fit neatly in your example sentence (though it is relevant to the scenario). I couldn't find anything else closer in the mainstream dictionaries but thought you are caught in a snail race and got lucky with Urban Dictionary.
Well this is going to be a snail race.
Urban Dictionary:
snail race
When two semi trucks are taking up both lanes on a freeway and both
are going at least five miles under the speed limit but one is going
slightly faster than the other.
Passenger: Dude the speed limit is 70 why are you only going 60.
Driver: Those two semi's are in a snail race, i can't get by them.
My first thought was at a snail's pace but that won't fit neatly in your example sentence (though it is relevant to the scenario). I couldn't find anything else closer in the mainstream dictionaries but thought you are caught in a snail race and got lucky with Urban Dictionary.
Well this is going to be a snail race.
Urban Dictionary:
snail race
When two semi trucks are taking up both lanes on a freeway and both
are going at least five miles under the speed limit but one is going
slightly faster than the other.
Passenger: Dude the speed limit is 70 why are you only going 60.
Driver: Those two semi's are in a snail race, i can't get by them.
edited Nov 25 '18 at 7:03
answered Nov 12 '18 at 15:06
alwayslearningalwayslearning
26.1k63894
26.1k63894
add a comment |
add a comment |
a bummer! TFD
- an unpleasant or disappointing experience
As in:
"Well this is going to be a bummer".
add a comment |
a bummer! TFD
- an unpleasant or disappointing experience
As in:
"Well this is going to be a bummer".
add a comment |
a bummer! TFD
- an unpleasant or disappointing experience
As in:
"Well this is going to be a bummer".
a bummer! TFD
- an unpleasant or disappointing experience
As in:
"Well this is going to be a bummer".
answered Nov 11 '18 at 20:35
lbflbf
20.5k22573
20.5k22573
add a comment |
add a comment |
Someone staying in a left lane at the same speed and distance as a car in the right lane, thus preventing you from passing, is sometimes called a formation flyer (no citation, but I've heard it), named after a flight formation of airplanes. Actually, the term can apply to cars in all lanes, if they make no attempt to enable those behind to pass.
So I'd coin the phrase formation-flyers frustration for the feeling you describe.
1
Care to explain the downvote?
– Drew
Nov 12 '18 at 5:58
The OP states: 'It should work in the sentence "Well this is going to be a ___"', which this phrase does not.
– DaveMongoose
Nov 12 '18 at 12:02
1
@DaveMongoose: I think it does work in that sentence - as well as anything else that means some kind of a frustration. But yes, it's a noun phrase and not a noun. And yes, it's newly minted.
– Drew
Nov 12 '18 at 16:06
add a comment |
Someone staying in a left lane at the same speed and distance as a car in the right lane, thus preventing you from passing, is sometimes called a formation flyer (no citation, but I've heard it), named after a flight formation of airplanes. Actually, the term can apply to cars in all lanes, if they make no attempt to enable those behind to pass.
So I'd coin the phrase formation-flyers frustration for the feeling you describe.
1
Care to explain the downvote?
– Drew
Nov 12 '18 at 5:58
The OP states: 'It should work in the sentence "Well this is going to be a ___"', which this phrase does not.
– DaveMongoose
Nov 12 '18 at 12:02
1
@DaveMongoose: I think it does work in that sentence - as well as anything else that means some kind of a frustration. But yes, it's a noun phrase and not a noun. And yes, it's newly minted.
– Drew
Nov 12 '18 at 16:06
add a comment |
Someone staying in a left lane at the same speed and distance as a car in the right lane, thus preventing you from passing, is sometimes called a formation flyer (no citation, but I've heard it), named after a flight formation of airplanes. Actually, the term can apply to cars in all lanes, if they make no attempt to enable those behind to pass.
So I'd coin the phrase formation-flyers frustration for the feeling you describe.
Someone staying in a left lane at the same speed and distance as a car in the right lane, thus preventing you from passing, is sometimes called a formation flyer (no citation, but I've heard it), named after a flight formation of airplanes. Actually, the term can apply to cars in all lanes, if they make no attempt to enable those behind to pass.
So I'd coin the phrase formation-flyers frustration for the feeling you describe.
edited Nov 12 '18 at 0:04
answered Nov 11 '18 at 23:57
DrewDrew
13.9k93055
13.9k93055
1
Care to explain the downvote?
– Drew
Nov 12 '18 at 5:58
The OP states: 'It should work in the sentence "Well this is going to be a ___"', which this phrase does not.
– DaveMongoose
Nov 12 '18 at 12:02
1
@DaveMongoose: I think it does work in that sentence - as well as anything else that means some kind of a frustration. But yes, it's a noun phrase and not a noun. And yes, it's newly minted.
– Drew
Nov 12 '18 at 16:06
add a comment |
1
Care to explain the downvote?
– Drew
Nov 12 '18 at 5:58
The OP states: 'It should work in the sentence "Well this is going to be a ___"', which this phrase does not.
– DaveMongoose
Nov 12 '18 at 12:02
1
@DaveMongoose: I think it does work in that sentence - as well as anything else that means some kind of a frustration. But yes, it's a noun phrase and not a noun. And yes, it's newly minted.
– Drew
Nov 12 '18 at 16:06
1
1
Care to explain the downvote?
– Drew
Nov 12 '18 at 5:58
Care to explain the downvote?
– Drew
Nov 12 '18 at 5:58
The OP states: 'It should work in the sentence "Well this is going to be a ___"', which this phrase does not.
– DaveMongoose
Nov 12 '18 at 12:02
The OP states: 'It should work in the sentence "Well this is going to be a ___"', which this phrase does not.
– DaveMongoose
Nov 12 '18 at 12:02
1
1
@DaveMongoose: I think it does work in that sentence - as well as anything else that means some kind of a frustration. But yes, it's a noun phrase and not a noun. And yes, it's newly minted.
– Drew
Nov 12 '18 at 16:06
@DaveMongoose: I think it does work in that sentence - as well as anything else that means some kind of a frustration. But yes, it's a noun phrase and not a noun. And yes, it's newly minted.
– Drew
Nov 12 '18 at 16:06
add a comment |
protected by tchrist♦ Nov 12 '18 at 0:41
Thank you for your interest in this question.
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1
Slow boat? (Usually it's a slow boat to nowhere, but you can skip that part in this case).
– Dan Bron
Nov 11 '18 at 17:44
Please add that as an answer. It's my favorite so far.
– calamari
Nov 11 '18 at 18:51
1
Here in Indiana USA I've heard this referred to as "Hoosier Parade", and it's not a compliment! Not a general term however...
– Bryan Hanson
Nov 11 '18 at 22:47
2
@BryanHanson Rather surprised that’s used in Indiana. Sounds more like the kind of expression you’d be likely to hear in Michigan or Illinois or Ohio.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
Nov 12 '18 at 0:34
@JanusBahsJacquet Well, I think the guy I first heard it from hailed from Chicago, so that makes sense.
– Bryan Hanson
Nov 12 '18 at 0:41