Fair. When I hear "bred" in the context of humans, it comes across as vulgar and in the realm of girls with pregnancy kinks, instead of "born and raised a family" being the less sexual way to say the same thing.
Well that's what I meant by context of humans. You hear it all the time in regards to animal husbandry for eugenical means like that, and that's what makes it so vulgar to use on a person.
Born and "bred" is an odd thing to say, instead of raised. Not enough for any of this obviously, but I'd certainly rib somebody for saying.
It definitely isn't an odd thing to say. Perhaps specifically where you live but not in the English-speaking world as a whole.
Fair. When I hear "bred" in the context of humans, it comes across as vulgar and in the realm of girls with pregnancy kinks, instead of "born and raised a family" being the less sexual way to say the same thing.
Or eugenics. Bred for sports or something like that.
Well that's what I meant by context of humans. You hear it all the time in regards to animal husbandry for eugenical means like that, and that's what makes it so vulgar to use on a person.