You can use "screw up" as a verb symbolizing 'to ruin' or 'to mess up' OR it can be a noun to describe a person.
ie. You "screwed up" the project. - You "ruined" the project.
He's a screw up. - He's a mistake/He's a failure.
However, it is slang, and can be justified as rather inappropriate.. so I dont recommend using it around people you dont know well.
2007-01-30 12:56:18
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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It is always negative. It can be a noun (call someone a screw up, "You're such a screw up!") or a verb ("you really screwed up this time!"). When you call someone a screw up, you are saying that they are incompetent and foolish and they can't live their life correctly. When you say to someone, "You screwed up this time!" you are saying that something that they did or did not do was wrong and the consequences of that screw up are probably obvious when you say it.
Yes, I agree with the person above me, you would not use it to your boss or a stranger. You either have to be friendly with the person or be in some position of authority or power.
2007-01-30 12:56:46
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answer #2
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answered by dug 4
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I use it in the same context as "messed up" or "mess up."
To say "you are screwed" is like saying "you have no chance" or at least that's how I use it. Hope that helps. As far as memorizing it, I'm not sure what you could do to memorize it other than just learn it through context and use.
2007-01-30 12:55:58
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answer #3
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answered by fayra_elm 4
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actual, one has no idea what style of words the former administration used. which incorporates flipping off the digital camera, putting forward they're going to take 'Saddam's *** out' etc. there have been distinctive events in which the Bush administration has used vulgar language questioning the microphone is off. i'm purely chuffed Barack Obama positioned it by using the indisputable fact that is and no way else. also,its not formality that shows a authorities is sensible, yet its action. The Bush administration did not enable everybody with no coat into the Oval place of work, they shook fingers etc. yet those cases at the same time as the microphone grow to be supposedly 'off' educate what style of people they're. And as well,isn't an administration the position there is fist bumps,user-friendly slang and humor what we extremely decide on immediately?extremely in those troubling monetary cases. i ought to a lot extremely have an administration that 'bumps fists' and does something extremely than 'shakes fingers' and does not something.
2016-12-03 06:27:29
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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If you've made a mistake or have made a mess of things then you've 'screwed up'. Someone who has been deemed to have made a mess of their life is sometimes called a 'screw up'.
2007-01-30 21:06:11
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answer #5
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answered by elflaeda 7
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To "screw" something up is to make it impossible or very hard to make it useable, right, or functional again. Like "I screwed up my check book." In this case, I failed to balance it so badly it will take me hours and possibly an accountant to make it add up. Or "I screwed up my hair." Perhaps I just gave myself a hair cut and it's really, really bad.
2007-01-30 12:57:19
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answer #6
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answered by GeminiVirgo1971 5
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A "screw-up" is a mistake or a person who has made a big mistake. "Screwing-up" is making a mistake. And screwing is having sex!
My middle name is Shinichi! I am a white guy from California, but my parents are both Buddhists (Nichiren), so I am Shinichi.
2007-01-30 12:57:01
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answer #7
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answered by stupidity_of_pride 4
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I screw up when i put in a light bulb
2007-01-30 13:04:07
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answer #8
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answered by chickennoodle 1
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When you do a lousy job - "Oh, I screwed that up so bad..."
When you can't do anything right - "Oh, I'm such a screw up!!"
2007-01-30 12:55:01
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answer #9
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answered by Jim C 5
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Not really when he's on the bottom and she's on the top, he's screwing up.
Sorry couldn't resist.
2007-01-30 12:56:47
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answer #10
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answered by Angelz 5
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