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Unprecedented:
novel; having no earlier occurrence |
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Dexterous:
showing or having skill, especially with the hands. |
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Doff:
remove (an item of clothing). |
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Leonine:
of or resembling a lion or lions. |
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Obsequious:
obedient or attentive to an excessive or servile degree. |
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Acme:
the point at which something is at its best or most highly developed. |
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A neologism (/niːˈɒlədʒɪzəm/; from Greek νέο- néo-, "new" and λόγος lógos, "speech, utterance") is a relatively recent or isolated term, word, or phrase that may be in the process of entering common use, but that has not yet been fully accepted into mainstream language.[1] Neologisms are often directly attributable to a specific person, publication, period, or event. In the process of language formation, neologisms are more mature than protologisms.[2]
Wiki... |
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Turnt is an abbreviation for "turned up." It can either mean being really excited for some upcoming event — or it means you're having fun because you're drunk.
It's New Year's Eve so of course I'm getting turnt tonight.
The morning after getting turnt, roll over and groggily drag yourself to brunch. |
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Snatched.
Another way of saying, "Damn — you look good." You can use "snatched" where you'd use "on fleek."
Your outfit is snatched. |
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"On fleek" dates back to 2003, when Urban Dictionary defined the phrase as "smooth, nice, sweet." So then why do we always associate the phrase with...eyebrows? We can thank Vine user Peaches Monroe for that association. She coined the phrase "eyebrows on fleek" in 2014; now, Kayla Newman (whose Vine username was Peaches Monroe), is crowd-funding her own make-up line. In general "on fleek" just means looking perfect.
What can I say? Those thick eyebrows that everyone made fun of in fifth grade are now constantly on fleek. |
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Thanks, social media for becoming a cesspool of useless plugs. A "plug" is a shameless and blatant endorsement for a product, person, or brand by a celebrity. Think: FitTea ads, make-up promos, or singers dancing to their own songs in a Snapchat. These endorsements are usually paid and often meant to subliminally make their followers want to engage in whatever item or person they're promoting.
"Did you see Kylie Jenner plug her new eye shadow palette on Snapchat every day for the past week?"
"Ugh, yes. And her friend's new song was plugged in there, too."
Or
"Does 50 Cent have to tag his vodka brand in every post?"
"What's the plug?"
"#EffenVodka"
"Oh, of course it is." |
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Lit means something is popping off. It may have its roots in the cringe-worthy celebratory phrase, “The roof is on fire!” For whatever reason, we have accepted heat-related slang as party phrases. But be warned, lit might be on its last leg of relevance. It’s been quite overused in the past couple months. To give you some perspective, when searching “lit” on Genius, there are nearly 100,000 results.
"How's the party"
"It's lit."
Or
"Drake's Views is too lit." |
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"Keep it 100."
If you're keeping it 100, you're acting in a way that's true to yourself and aligned with your values, as well as being respectful to others.
Larry Wilmore always kept it 100 during his daily TV show segment, "Keep it 100." |
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hundo p
Use this response when you 100% agree with a statement. One-hundred percent = hundo p. Only use it when you are positive about something.
"Do you think you're going to go to the party tonight?"
"Hundo p — let's split an Uber." |
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Suh
Remember that T-Mobile commercial where everyone answered the phone “Wussup?” and it became the most obnoxious greeting ever? This is the 2016 version of that. It is a combination of the word “sup” and “huh,” making you sound confused and interested at the same time. It has its roots in this viral video. It caught on fast enough. Gigi Hadid even did a Vine of herself “suh-ing” earlier this year. (Fun fact: I’m in the background of the video texting.)
“Hey.”
“Suh.” |
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Trill
Another simple linguistic equation. True + real = trill.
"Tell me about yourself."
"Dunno. I guess I'm trill."
"That's very trill of you to say." |
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TFW is an acronym for "that feel when." Naturally, you use the phrase to describe your emotional landscape at any given moment. It's typically used in texting.
TFW you realize you've poured orange juice into your cereal into milk.
TFW you're about to go cliff-jumping but realize your bathing suit is dangerously loose. |
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An acronym for "one true pairing," OTP is especially used in fandoms to describe a person's favorite fictional couple.
Doctor Who fandom: While I love River Song, Rose and the Tenth Doctor are my OTP.
Harry Potter fandom: Sure, I acknowledge that Luna Lovegood married another person, but she and Neville are my OTP.
Parks and Rec fandom: Leslie Knope and waffles are clearly the correct OTP. |
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P
Dare we even reveal the meaning behind this very, very simple slang word? Like "v," "p" is just a shortening of a word. When people say "p," they mean "pretty."
Beginner slang: That new Netflix show is p cool.
Advanced slang: I'm p much not going to do anything when I go home, and I'm high-key excited for it. No FOMO for me. |
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Here's the alternate to FOMO you never knew you needed: JOMO, aka "the joy of missing out." Because sometimes, there's nothing sweeter than curling up in bed with a book on a Friday night, even as the city parties and swirls around you.
*passes by a line of people waiting to get into a club on a slushy weekend in February*
You: Ah. Sweet, sweet, JOMO. |
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Category: Belia & Informasi
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