Is it acceptable for a school teacher to use the term 'posse' or p*ssys in the school playground?. I would think that is highly unacceptable and like street talk/bad language and shouldn't be used by teachers at school.
My child came home saying there was an incident involving her friend, and when her friend made her way back to her group of friends and the teacher said 'go running to your posse. My child wasn't sure whether she said posse or p*ssys..my child does not use any kind of rude words or street words, so this was a shock to me.
we used to have posses in the playground when I was young and saw lots of westerns. It just meant a group of friends rather than a gang. It may still carry that old meaning, but I'm now too old to be sure.
Mine aged 5 came out with "I'm going to whack you on the fanny" to her mother - bear in mind it was in the States where things are the other way around. This was not language that was used at home - one look at my wife and laughter - and "Schoooool."
Unless the school has an infestation of cats, I'd suspect posse, meaning a group of folk with something in common. I'm unsure why folk might think otherwise, especially as the child wasn't even sure.
Wierdly, posse was one of those words which had me reaching for the dictionary, as late as my mid-teens, after hearing the expression "we need to gather the posse" in some western. Possibly one which wouldn't pass muster, these days, because it featured a white actor, playing the Native American.
I hope this is a wind up. How can anyone question the use of posse and query it as pussy? Seriously, what adult of moderate intelligence would take this misheard incidence of a young child seriously??????
"they have slain the Earl o' Moray, and Lady Mondegreen."
PP, I recall Michael Parkinson's account of going to a school nativity play somewhere oop north and Joseph coming in from a hard day at the workshop to be told by Mary "The Baby Jesus has been a right little booger today."