| 4. | algore | ||
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Verb, transitive, to algore a result (an election, a court finding, a scientific conclusion, a sporting event): To refuse to concede a legitimate defeat, by employing teams of attorneys, increasingly-more-fanciful conspiracy theories and lawyerly machinations. Behaving without honor, dividing voters or spectators rather than uniting them, and tainting an opponent's legitimate victory and delaying the opponent's ability to celebrate and take office. In the February 7, 2010 second round of elections, Yulia Tymoshenko ended up with 3.5% fewer votes than her opponent, Viktor Yanukovych, in an internationally-observed election deemed the cleanest-ever in Ukrainian history, but rather than do the honorable thing and concede, Yulia has algored the results.
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| 1. | algore | ||
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The matter left in a toilet after the first, and any subsequent, flush. (Also referred to a "two flusher") So named because a politician of a similar sounding name pushed the legislation mandating how much water we can use in our toilets. After a night of drinking, I laid an algore in the john.
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| 2. | algore | ||
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Al Gore, alloneword, as pronounced by Rush Limbaugh. bubba: Mah vice-president is an algore.
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| 3. | algore | ||
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(verb) to delay the inevitable by seeking out technicalities; usually for political purposes The democratic party is algoring the California recall just as they algored the last presidential election and the Texas redistricting.
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