According to Merriam Webster, the word comp can be used as a noun or a verb to t mean things provided free, or providing something for free. I guess that's an abbreviation for complimentary. The term swag is used because often, at exhibitions or trade fairs, some people just cruise round helping themselves to (sometimes excessive quantities of) freebies, and stand holders suspect that such ...
Free me swag out, camped under the stars, and I was healed up. I couldn't understand "free me swag out.". I looked up "swag" meaning stolen goods which makes no sense here. Then I looked up "free out" thinking that maybe "out" belongs to the word "free", but again no such thing. Then I looked up the whole phrase "free me swag out", and no such ...
"Swag" (to mean "confidence") is slang, and the meaning and usage will vary with context. Because it is slang, I would recommend not using it in casual conversation until you fully understand all the nuances. Misuse of colloquialisms can be offensive in some contexts. "Swag" is actually short for "swagger" which literally means "to walk with extreme confidence". Example: He was dressed ...
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1 woe is a noun/interjection meaning misery, sorrow, misfortune, etc. (Note that this is different from the homophone whoa which is a command to, eg, a horse, to stop.) "Woe is me" is an idiom likely borrowed from hundreds of years ago (hence the odd syntax) which could be read as "Woe has befallen me".