Just another simpler and cooler name for a type of netspeak where almost all vowels are excluded from text.
It's very versatile, just like l33tspeak, and is usually used between only you and your best friend, also known as 'br', the brspeak term for 'brother' or 'bro'.
(Commonexample of brspeak)
Guy 1: sup br
Guy 2: shtp im plyng fps
Guy 1: ok i ply 2
(on game)
Guy 1: ya pwn hedshot
Guy 2: br wtf frkn frk chp chtr
Guy 1: bow dwn 2 the chmp, chmp
1. Donald Rumsfeld is a master of bullspeak.
2. She's says she wasn't mad but we all knew it was some bullspeak designed to hide her true feelings.
3. I'm so tired of all these jackleg televangelists and there bullspeak.
A style of speaking used in the English language where the speaker places an inflection on an adjective or noun different in tone and volume from the rest of the sentence. This inflection occurs most often at the end of the sentence, occasionally in the middle, and rarely in the beginning.
"Why was my mother's yacht violently assaulted on the high seas?"
"The ship was attacked and their goods STOLEN because they weren't PIRATES!"
"Touché, good sir. Your impressive logic, and even more impressive Bergspeak, have shown me the truf".
guy #1: how are you so good at first person shooter games ?
guy #2: so the way you do it is you just *buuuurp* click the head man.
guy #1: dude i don't like it when you're burpsplaining me, stop it!
Talking out of your arse. An update on George Orwells' "newspeak" from the book 1984. Primarily used in reference to the growing use of Artificial Intelligence chatbots to think for us when writing such things as homework.