Michael wrote:Stuff
I think the point to take away from that was that touché is the word you're looking for. Its etymology originates in fencing, referring to being hit by an opponent. A more rapier reply to loftar would have actually been just to say 'touché.' It's worth pointing out that you're using urban dictionary as a dictionary when, in fact, its definitions and lexicon don't reflect language. In many cases the words and definitions added in are used by small groups or by no one at all and are just there as joke entries. There are valid entries in there as well but we, as English speakers, must consider on an individual basis what's an actual word, a type-o, and what's not a word. 'Tushay' would have modern etymological roots in a misspelling of the word 'touché' when someone attempted to phonetically spell out an e-acute. Accepting that to be a word on its own would be like saying 'que' is a word akin to 'queue' rather than just a type-o. You can, it's just redundant and silly, and most people who see it won't get what you're saying without examining the context of your words, which is a gamble. Language is only valuable if it can communicate what we want to say to others. There's no set in stone way to do that but you can, most certainly, make it more difficult.