Citations:blue waffle

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English citations of blue waffle

  • 2010, uk.legal.moderated[1] (Usenet):
    I really insist that you don't look up "Blue Waffle" or "One Man One Jar" ;-)
  • 2012, “OT: Westboro Calls Fox News Anchors "Sluts".”, in rec.music.artists.kiss[2] (Usenet):
    Because if you were straight, then you would know you eat that "female body part." I bet you don't know what beaver is either? [...] Maybe I'll teach you what a blue waffle is one day. LOL!
  • 2012, Middle Passage, An Inclination of Thought, →ISBN:
    they have developed many sexual transmitted diseases such as Gonorrhea, Chlamydia and H.I.V and Aids and now they have a new one out that is called Blue Waffle diseases that is a diseases that turns the woman vagina dark blue with blisters on it and they don't have a cure for it
  • 2013, Kenny Attaway, Ghetto English Rock, Juici Couture & the Suga-Hill Gang[3], →ISBN:
    Sweets informed me that Ignorant Shit may have Blue Waffle Disease (not the kind you sit down and eat, but lay down and get).
  • 2013, “NJ Councilwoman Falls For ‘Blue Waffle Disease’ Scam”, in alt.thought.southern[4] (Usenet):
    she wanted to know what the local government was doing to combat the outbreak of an STD known as “Blue Waffle Disease.”
  • 2014, Louisa Allen, “Don't forget, Thursday is test[icle] time! The use of humour in sexuality education”, in Sex Education, →DOI:
    Vili's comment works to demean Mr A's masculine status by exposing him as lacking sexual knowledge about ‘blue waffles’ and subsequently (hetero)sexual experience.
  • 2014 March 19, J. Ching, A. Goertz, J. Hong, “The purity test results are in.”, in The Gateway[5], volume 104, number 29, University of Alberta, page 16:
    101 who contracted blue waffle
  • 2015, Kristen Marie Bricker, "Condoms and consent!" knowledge, efficacy and positivity in a sexual health program, thesis submitted to San Francisco State University, →DOI:
    Many students ask questions about sex myths or things that they heard about or saw through various media outlets: “Is Blue Waffels a real STI? Or is it made up?”; “How common would the STI Blue Waffle be?” “Blue Waffle” is a fabricated STI that circulated the Internet, and many high school students believe it to be real.
  • 2015, A. Litras, S. Latreille, M. Temple-Smith, “Dr Google, porn and friend-of-a-friend: Where are young men really getting their sexual health information?”, in Sexual Health[6]:
    Some unusual, and likely ineffective, methods of contraception were listed, and ‘Blue Waffle’ was offered as a STI. ‘Blue Waffle’ became known erroneously as a STI after a picture of a woman’s genitals were uploaded to a ‘shock’ website in 2008, and has since been perpetuated by non-medical websites and Internet memes.
  • 2016, Alexandra Marie Sotiriadis, Out of the box: exploring adolescent questions and concerns in sex education, thesis submitted to San Francisco State University, →DOI:
    Many of these terms involve slang and “adult” topics beyond the scope of our age-appropriate curriculum: “What is a dildo?”, “What is 69?”, “What is a blue waffle?”, “What is a chode?”
  • 2016, H. Corinna, S.E.X.: the all-you-need-to-know sexuality guide to get you through your teens and twenties[7], 2nd edition, page 356:
    Ah, the Internet, providing us such widely believed and inaccurate (though entertaining) myths and urban legends as giant camel spiders in Iraq, “blue waffle disease” (nope, not a real STI and never was), and an apparent zombie nibbling shoppers in Tennessee.
  • 2017, M.E. Carter, Goalie: A Texas Mutiny Soccer Romance[8]:
    "I'm guessing now is not a good time to make a joke about a blue waffle." "I have no idea what a blue waffle is, but judging by the expression on your face, I don't want to, do I?" [...] "Whatever you do, do not Google it."
  • 2017, Anita Ravi, “Annals On Being a Doctor Story Slam - How to Treat Blue Waffle Disease”, in Annals of Internal Medicine, →DOI, video:
  • 2019, Gillian Singer, Acting Hysterical: Analyzing the Construction, Diagnosis and Portrayal of Historical and Modern Hysterical Women[9], thesis submitted to Union College:
    Blue waffle” was, according to a variety of blogs and websites, a fictional sexually transmitted infection that turned vaginas blue and disfigured them.
  • 2020, A. D. Bagchi, A. Thompson, K. Damas, E. Corasim, “Step UP! To Stamp Out Stigma: adapting and testing a bystander intervention to reduce HIV-related stigma”, in Journal of Public Health, →DOI:
    For example, one individual who valued their level of knowledge about HIV mentioned that, “there are STDs out there that folks don’t talk about”, referencing the “blue waffle” hoax that began circulating on social media in 2013.
  • 2021, Jozette Belmont, Constructing Curriculum: Centering Identities in Sex Education[10], thesis submitted to City University of New York:
    It is saddening that an educational institution would perpetuate a myth like blue waffle, often joked about on the internet or in classrooms, when it should offer concrete information.