These auxiliary verbs that extend the meaning of the main verbs include can, may, must, shall and will . ( In " I may bollix up this explanation, " may is the modal auxiliary that sets the conditional mode, sometimes called " subjunctive mood, " of the verb bollix, a verb whose ancient nautical coinage has its genesis in genitals.
22.
These auxiliary verbs that extend the meaning of the main verbs include can, may, must, shall and will . ( In " I may bollix up this explanation, " may is the modal auxiliary that sets the conditional mode, sometimes called " subjunctive mood, " of the verb bollix, a verb whose ancient nautical coinage has its genesis in genitals.
23.
As he hopped about the aisle, the Minister for Finance said, with the bridge of his thin nose white from rage, ` You maldorous, legless bollix, I'll send you to Fisheries for this .'He locked eyes with Thorn . ` And you mind your own ( expletive ) business .'As one of the flight attendants came to help, the Minister said to her, ` That's the shaggin'Irish for you.
24.
The phrase " bollocksed up " means to be in a botched, bungled, confused or disarrayed state . " E . g . ", he " managed to bollix up the whole project . " In the printing and newspaper industries, dropping a California Job Type case of Moveable type spilling the contents was a classic example of " bollocksing up the works . " The box was called " pied . " Bollocksed in that sense meant, Beyond all repair.