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Ingrida Jasiukevičiūtė

“I Feel Personally Attacked”: 50 Times People Got Savagely Roasted On The Internet

Some people have such a way with words they can even make insults sound good. In reality, you don't even have to channel your inner Shakespeare to make an insult pleasant to one's ears. It just has to be clever enough to make the other person want to disappear inside their shell like a turtle.

We're fans of wordplay and justice here at Bored Panda, so, we've got a collection of the sickest and most inventive burns that people have dished out on the Internet. If you're looking for inspiration or want to see some cleverly-crafted justice where jerks got put in their place, check out these clever comebacks!

#1 A Thread On Aposematism

Image credits: SameriteRL

#2 A New Service For Beauticians To Offer?

Image credits: Munchkinpea

#3 Blaming Young People For Being Triggered

Image credits: kyno1

Did you think Twitter invented people throwing insults at each other in a public space? Well, think again! Back in the olden days, poets would engage in insult rap battles referred to as "flyting." Today, we can find examples of flyting in classical works such as Beowulf and King Lear, but other cultures have their versions as well: the Japanese haikai and the Arabic naqa'id.

The most famous example of poets giving each other lashings in verbal form would probably be "The Flyting of Dunbar and Kennedie." That medieval rap battle was the first instance a poet used an excrement-related joke and also used the now-ubiquitous curse that starts with an F.

#4 They Got That Johnny Bravo Aesthetic

Image credits: KaamDeveloper

#5 Degree Man Strikes Again

Image credits: IHateMath14

#6 Very Funny Things Are Happening

Image credits: DaniusJones123

What was the point of these flytings? Not just to flex the poets' rhyming muscles, if you were wondering. Just like diss tracks today, they could make or break them: the poets' image, honor, and social standing depended on their performance. The poets performed the flyting to the royal court, but people outside the court could read their insults and boost their profiles.

Nothing was off-limits during flytings. As Christine M. Robinson writes, Dunbar listed many of Kennedy's defects: "his highland origins, begging, cowardice, treachery, ugly appearance, venereal disease, jaundice, and sexual activity." Well, at least he didn't accuse him of downloading PDF files.

#7 That Is Hilarious

Image credits: kalmantibs

#8 Lake Superior Hasn't Wrecked Anyone Like This Since The Edmund Fitzgerald

Image credits: LakeSuperior

#9 Due For Some Good Luck Eventually

Image credits: reddit.com

Most Old English insults would be borderline nonsensical today, but we can't deny they sound pretty fun. Let's take "Blowsabella," for example. Yes, it's an insult to women, but not what you might've thought. It's a comment on a woman's hair, most often about how disheveled and unkempt it looked.

#10 Then There Was Flood

Image credits: reddit.com

#11 Blame Your Parents For This One

Image credits: MrShepard

#12 Aggressive But Relatable

Image credits: mareksierra

Other old insults which might sound like they came straight from a five-year-old's vocabulary, are Gollumpus and Grumbletonian. And no, they don't have anything to do with The Lord of The Rings or Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory. Gollumpus was a "large, clumsy fellow," probably originating from the verb galumph (to move clumsily with a heavy tread). And a Grumbletonian was someone who complained all the time, no matter how good they had it.

#13 100% Pure Beef

Image credits: reddit.com

#14 She Has A Beautiful Way With Words

Image credits: synthgrrl

#15 Great Reply

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Not all Old English insults sounded so nonsensical; some were worded quite normally. Like 'Afternoon Farmer', used to describe lazy people, perhaps because farmers would rise early and grind through the day. If people wanted to call someone emaciated or skinny like a skeleton, they would call them 'Death's Head Upon a Mop Stick.'

#16 Died Of Hungry

Image credits: TheRealCodeGD

#17 Plot Twist: She Pays The Full Rent Now And Does Not Want Her Man To Build Up To Much Self Esteem

Image credits: EllyClark

#18 God Is Out To Get Her

Image credits: reddit.com

But how can we talk about insults without talking about The Bard himself whose put-downs were almost second to none? Truly, who else could come up with quips like "froward and unable worms," "fat guts," "clay-brained guts," "luxurious mountain goat," or "February face"?

#19 That's Some Seriously Old Beer

Image credits: XcOM987

#20 Wow It's Like Makeup And Having Your Hair Down Makes You Look A Little Different

Image credits: h_unt

#21 He Is Honest. The Best Kind Of Doctor

Image credits: baddanadanabad

Shakespearean insults aren't just for name-calling. He was also a master of witty retorts. In Henry IV, Chief Justice tells Falstaff: "You are as a candle, the better burnt out." Or how about this very politically incorrect observation: "No longer from head to foot than from hip to hip, she is spherical, like a globe; I could find countries in her."

#22 That’ll Show Him

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#23 "Why Doesn't My Kid Visit Me Anymore!?"

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#24 Maybe That Rat Makes A Nice Meal And You're Being Judgemental

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The reality is that we don't live in a Shakespeare play. When someone insults us, we spend way too much time thinking of a comeback. A good retort only comes to us when we're lying in bed at night the following night. Psychologists say that's because the parts of our brains that are responsible for coming up with a witty remark turn off at that moment; they're sensing a threat.

#25 This Is What This Type Of Parenting Leads To

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#26 I Have No Idea Who This Man Is But I Love Him

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#27 Incel Says What?

Image credits: SeriousExplorer8891

Psychotherapist Melanie Williams says that "Are you okay?" is the most universal response when someone says something wildly inappropriate to you. "There's so much packed in this short comeback," she told TIME. This flips the attention back at the insulter, not so much what they were talking about. Also, Williams notes, it invites the insulter to self-reflect.

#28 And The Most Hair-Raising

Image credits: Apocafeller

#29 No Argument Here

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#30 Get In The Ball

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Which of these comebacks did you like the best, Pandas? Do you think you will be using any of them in your own life any time soon? Let us know in the comments! And while you're there, don't forget to share with us the best witty retorts you have in your arsenal!

#31 Cooking Together

Image credits: The Humorists

#32 It's So Simple

Image credits: Skullwriter

#33 Nothing Is More Accurate

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#34 Dads Having Fun

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#35 Well You Can't Argue With That Kind Of Logic

Image credits: RabbitGuySentMe

#36 Best Way To Respond To Threats

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#37 Two Sides Of The Same Coin

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#38 Bro Deleted His Account After This

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#39 The Man Himself

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#40 It's Always Broken

Image credits: captainjolossidechick

#41 Is That Why There's So Many Of You 23 Year Olds Around?

Image credits: todayyearsold

#42 Who's A Vet Here And Accepts The Challenge?

Image credits: LukeZNotFound

#43 Worlds Greatest Comeback

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#44 Sitcom Bullying

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#45 It's About Creating Something Better

Image credits: L_Lawliet_4304

#46 I'd Really Love To Know The Thinking Pattern Behind This

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#47 Scientifically Wrecked

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#48 Emotional Damage

Image credits: takeawaytrauma

#49 That Wasn't Just A Roast, That Was A Burn

Image credits: Samicuz

#50 Food Standards

Image credits: yaketaranga

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