Logan Whalen

Portland OR

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Logan WhalenPortland ORJan 7, 2025, 7:01 AM2025-01-07negative68%

The correct phrase is "bald-faced lie"; "bald-faced" is the preferred term when describing a blatant, obvious lie, while "bold-faced" is often mistakenly used but technically means something slightly different, referring to something emphasized or prominent.

13 recommendations
Logan WhalenPortland ORJan 7, 2025, 7:03 AM2025-01-07neutral51%

@Grumpy right! BOLD FACED just means bold face like bold font.

4 recommendations
Logan WhalenPortland ORJan 7, 2025, 7:06 AM2025-01-07negative65%

@J The correct phrase is "bald-faced lie"; "bald-faced" is the preferred term when describing a blatant, obvious lie, while "bold-faced" is often mistakenly used but technically means something different, referring to something emphasized or prominent, like a bold font

3 recommendations
Logan WhalenPortland ORDec 11, 2025, 4:50 AM2025-12-10neutral73%

@Toni I came here to say the same thing. I even asked a German friend and they said “what is Prosit?”

2 recommendations
Logan WhalenPortland ORJan 15, 2026, 7:16 AM2026-01-14positive52%

The AIOLI answer always bugs me because aioli doesn’t mean garlic sauce. There’s an amazing cafe next to my work that uses a lemon aioli on one of their sandwiches and it’s so good! Tie chef said that an aioli is any “flavored” mayo. Could be lemon aioli, dill aioli etc. But, like EDYS for popular ice cream brand, that no one from the west coast has ever heard of or seen, we know that garlicky sauce is AIOLI.

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