Kender
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Oct 23, 2015
- Messages
- 2,483
Disney-bound would mean going to Disney.
Adding an -ing does not IMHO make it a cutesy way to say dressing up. No one says "I'm collegebounding" - at least not that I've heard.
It's a play on the words based on their alternative meaning to your original comment about knowing it as a verb only (to bound as in to run with leaping strides). Happens all the time with language. Things morph to better encapsulate something.
It doesn't have to have the -ing (the modifier is not always required). Disney-bound or Disney bound yes, that is "going to Disney". But combining them into one word (Disneybound) has morphed into the descriptive word for "going Disney" or "going as Disney". It refers to both the noun (outfit; "My Disneybound is created using X, Y, and Z.") and as a verb (the action; "I'm going to Disneybound on my next trip.".
Language evolves and grows. You don't have to understand it. You don't have to participate. I was trying to help explain to you how the word evolved. And as this could easily get off topic continuing in circles with the same comments I will leave this as my final comments on explaining the grammar logic that caused it to spawn into existence.
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