Meet the Other Phone. Child-safe in minutes.

Meet the Other Phone.
Child-safe in minutes.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To wonder about 'boobing babies'

94 replies

Biber · 17/10/2019 16:14

There is a thread about SPaG, inappropriate Xs and (sincere, deeply felt shudder) the use of OF instead of HAVE in, for example, I should have asked on AIBU first.

A poster on there mentioned the phrase 'to boob one's baby'. It's about 50 years since I had an infant to my breast and I am not up to date with up to date terminology. This one, however, I had heard, and rather liked. The alliteration. The directness. Does it have the Mums Net seal of approval?

OP posts:
BertrandRussell · 17/10/2019 16:16

I think it’s utterly vile-sorryi

DinoSn0re · 17/10/2019 16:16

No. It’s awful.

formerbabe · 17/10/2019 16:16

Awful

Areyoufree · 17/10/2019 16:17

I like saying the word "boob" in any context, so it's fine by me.

Booooooooooooob.

xtinak · 17/10/2019 16:18

There was a thread a month or so ago where the consensus seemed to be that it's terrible.

I'm with you though I like it.

KnifeAngel · 17/10/2019 16:18

It's awful. So twee.

EugenesAxe · 17/10/2019 16:19

I saw that a teacher had written ‘might of’ in a class learning target statement stuck in my DS’s book the other day. We need to stamp it out of the new generation of educators before we’re overrun 😞

In terms of boobing a baby, I don’t feel strongly either way. It's rather lazy I guess.

Bezalelle · 17/10/2019 16:21

"To boob" is not a verb

< gavel >

Biber · 17/10/2019 16:21

Ha. I'll just whisper it round here in that case. I still like it.

OP posts:
NoIDontWatchLoveIsland · 17/10/2019 16:22

I hate when boob is used as a verb.

Whats wrong with " breastfeeding the baby". That's also alliterative.

MrsBungle · 17/10/2019 16:22

Awful

Alsohuman · 17/10/2019 16:24

Might of shudder

Stuckinanutshell · 17/10/2019 16:24

I have a very aversion to it - to an almost comical level. Any variation too - boobing, offered the boob, baby was on the boob, was boobing all last night, etc.

If I’m honest, when I’ve actively heard it used in public it seems to be by mothers who go out of their way to make it clear they breastfeed.

Yes. Ok. Well done. It isn’t new. Shuffle along ... and take your flapping boobs with you to boob another day.

‘To boob’ and ‘boobing’ is right up there with ‘gash’ as an insult. Makes me shudder. I really hate it. Bleh.

Moist is fine ha ha.

Biber · 17/10/2019 16:25

I saw that a teacher had written ‘might of’ in a class learning target statement stuck in my DS’s book the other day. We need to stamp it out of the new generation of educators before we’re overrun

Glory be. Horrendous. This is not new. The literacy levels of my daughter's tutors a decade or so back were too low.

OP posts:
Biber · 17/10/2019 16:26

Gash as an insult?

OP posts:
FlamedToACrisp · 17/10/2019 16:29

@Bezalelle

"To boob" is not a verb

Yes, it is. It means 'to make a mistake.'

Stompythedinosaur · 17/10/2019 16:32

I hate it. Boob is such a sexualized term for breasts.

hammeringinmyhead · 17/10/2019 16:32

A brand I bought some nice breastfeeding clothes from insists on describing customers as "boobing mummas". It almost put me off.

lazyarse123 · 17/10/2019 16:33

I hate it.

FurbabyMama · 17/10/2019 16:35

Literacy levels of some teachers never fail to amaze me! Although obviously it's not all teachers.

I think to boob is acceptable if it's used to mean hitting someone with a boob (like elbowing or kneeing someone): "I accidentally boobed my baby in the face when I turned round." (No, I'm not entirely sure how you'd manage that!) The thought of using it to mean breastfeeding is ridiculous and rather childish to me.

Owlsintowels · 17/10/2019 16:36

I think it's the right side of cute / silly, I don't normally like cute things and I'm not a cutesy person. I'm surprised so many hate it.

xtinak · 17/10/2019 16:36

I hate it. Boob is such a sexualized term for breasts.

But I feel like it's being reclaimed.

Celebelly · 17/10/2019 16:37

I use it as a noun 'She wants boob' (only in certain circles!) but not as a verb.

Rystall · 17/10/2019 16:39

Urgh... no. It’s horrible. Something really crude and common about it. It’s breastfeeding or just feeding.

( I also can’t believe grown up, adult women refer to their breasts as their ‘boobs’).