bitch this whore do it like the bull
Dublin Core
Subject
Description
This artifact is an art piece comprised of magnets with swear words printed on them. The piece is considered art by the submitter, but it is also used as a lighthearted means of communication with the submitter's roommates.
The submitter provided the following about the artifact’s history:
"These are swear word magnets that I bought for my apartment that my roommates and I use to communicate with each other and just have fun while waiting for stuff to cook. I thought they would possibly fit in the museum because they are a creative way to express how you are feeling and because life isn't censored and its fun to swear"
The submitter provided the following about the artifact’s history:
"These are swear word magnets that I bought for my apartment that my roommates and I use to communicate with each other and just have fun while waiting for stuff to cook. I thought they would possibly fit in the museum because they are a creative way to express how you are feeling and because life isn't censored and its fun to swear"
Creator
Unknown
Publisher
Unpublished
Date
Language
English
Coverage
2000-2024
Performance Item Type Metadata
Genre
art
Material
magnets
Circulation
None
Linguistic Text
bitch this whore do it like the bull
goddamn prick you pissed on me! I fuck assholes! he make hell of a shithead one asswipe
what are she off to bastard be an incredible fucker we get with every damn turd
I have monkey shit in my face that dog is fucking your mother
cocking problem jackass
am or and er
son of a but sucker
goddamn prick you pissed on me! I fuck assholes! he make hell of a shithead one asswipe
what are she off to bastard be an incredible fucker we get with every damn turd
I have monkey shit in my face that dog is fucking your mother
cocking problem jackass
am or and er
son of a but sucker
Uploaded
04/28/18
Audience
the submitter's roommates
Citation
Unknown, “bitch this whore do it like the bull,” Museum of Everyday Writing, accessed April 28, 2024, https://museumofeverydaywriting.omeka.net/items/show/834.