You don’t have a danger word? Ya man, I say “teacup” and she knows to back off but if I say “please” that bitch knows to crank it up.
by Staygoldburg June 12, 2021
pronounciation: wərd snīpər
noun
1. A verbal marksman who attacks someone else in a comment section by taking a potshot at them but doesn't really say anything of substance or worth. Word snipers are not interested in having a real conversation. They normally just make a single, negative reply to another person's comment and take off, never to be heard from again. Their potshot may be related or unrelated to the subject of discussion. Unlike trolls, word snipers don't continually harass other people. They get in, take their shot, and they're gone. Trolls tend to hound people mercilessly for as long as they can get away with it.
noun
1. A verbal marksman who attacks someone else in a comment section by taking a potshot at them but doesn't really say anything of substance or worth. Word snipers are not interested in having a real conversation. They normally just make a single, negative reply to another person's comment and take off, never to be heard from again. Their potshot may be related or unrelated to the subject of discussion. Unlike trolls, word snipers don't continually harass other people. They get in, take their shot, and they're gone. Trolls tend to hound people mercilessly for as long as they can get away with it.
by XX01011000 March 31, 2015
Healing oneself by working with words and letting them order and clarify the way one feels, thinks, and acts.
After a major television network offered to interview me, but then cancel the interview, lowered my self-concept, confused me, made me feel powerless—even helpless, but not hopeless.
Soon after I started to edit the index of a book I'm writing, working with words made me feel increasingly better.
Working with words balanced my emotions and allowed me to feel, think, and act correctly again. I call that word therapy.
Soon after I started to edit the index of a book I'm writing, working with words made me feel increasingly better.
Working with words balanced my emotions and allowed me to feel, think, and act correctly again. I call that word therapy.
by but for March 8, 2018
simply a cooler way to say explain.
or for some people, their vocabulary is so minute that this is how they are able to say "explain".
or for some people, their vocabulary is so minute that this is how they are able to say "explain".
Erika Erika Erika- "i can't tell you what he did, it's just to hard to word it up."
*as in while texting;
"no man, i'll just tell you tomorrow, i'm too lazy to word it up.
*as in while texting;
"no man, i'll just tell you tomorrow, i'm too lazy to word it up.
by flagma April 18, 2010
Said in agreement to another's figurative brother or homey. Also may be used in the form of a question to another's figurative brother or homey.
John: Yo, you jack that stereo yo?
James: Word son. Out the back a dat truck.
John: Word son?!
James: Word!
James: Word son. Out the back a dat truck.
John: Word son?!
James: Word!
by FerrisBueler September 20, 2005
by pseudonym qwerty December 1, 2014