werdon

It comes from the Scandinavian word "wer" - meaning something worse, more vile, more evil;
With the addition of "don" it has been accepted as "master of evil" or "someone worse".
1.
- I robbed a store of several necklaces.
- That's nothing... I robbed 2 elderly grandmothers of gold necklaces today.
- You're such a 'werdon'...

2.
- I found a poor little kitten today. I took him in, took care of him and he got better. I'm so happy.
- I would have left him or taken him for dinner for my dogs.
- You know what, you're such a 'werdon'...

3.
- today in the 5000 m relay race our team could have won if it wasn't for the fact that you drank yesterday and we didn't even make it to the podium. This isn't the first time you've failed.
- yes I know... I'm a "werdon"...
- exactly! change at last!
by bartar March 16, 2025
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werdon

Comes from the Scandinavian "wer" -"worse", "bad", vile". With the addition of don it has become "master of evil" or "someone really worse than others"
1.
- I robbed a store of several necklaces.
- That's nothing... I robbed 2 elderly grandmothers of gold necklaces today.
- You're such a 'werdon'...

2.
- I found a poor little kitten today. I took him in, took care of him and he got better. I'm so happy.
- I would have left him or taken him for dinner for my dogs.
- You know what, you're such a 'werdon'...

3.
- today in the 5000 m relay race our team could have won if it wasn't for the fact that you drank yesterday and we didn't even make it to the podium. This isn't the first time you've failed.
- yes I know... I'm a "werdon"...
- exactly! change at last!
by bartar March 16, 2025
mugGet the werdon mug.