as true as it is false
used in a dismissive way when you’re out of things to say in a discussion and/or are bored with the topic. in actuality it means nothing, but for a few seconds it sounds like it means something profound, which gives you enough time to switch topics to something you know more about.
jill: marijuana should be legalized, the government could make so much money if it were legal, because they could tax it instead of waisting money housing pot users who are in jail.
jack: that’s only as true as it is false. anyways, did you hear that johnny got fired from his job?
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- glandaceous
the yellowish-brown color of an acorn. your house is glandaceous. your skin tone is a pretty glandaceous.
- atall said
usually used as the definitive end of a typed statement, particularly when talking negatively about the content of that statement and where punctuation and grammar are questionable. popularised by first use on the owlstalk web forum and stevezone websites. note, ‘at all’ must be written as one, e.g. ‘atall’ and ‘said’ remains seperate from ‘atall’. […]
- quelle surprise
from french: what a surprise “looks like we’re going to exams next week” “quelle surprise”
- glut box
vulgar name for v-g-n- (royal naval expression) she had a glut box like a bill poster’s bucket
- Brown Joe
a brown joe, is a s-xual act, where feces and f-ll-t– becomes one. person a proceeds to defecate in person b’s mouth, and while his droppings are still hot, person a begins a f-ll-t– with person b. the term is a play of words, where the “brown joe” is the p-n-s of person b when […]