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blobulate 

1. To mold/form into blobs.

2. To break a larger form into smaller blobular pieces.

Example: When you drop something liquid, it usually blobulates after hitting the ground.

Example: In Terminator 2.. After the scene where the terminator was shattered into peices.. It blobulated, returned to his previous form.


blobulate by Quintin Paulson September 12, 2005

Binoculate 

The act of ejaculating whilst looking through binoculars.
I was watching your mom change with my binoculars and I totally binoculated in my jeans.
Binoculate by Teflarcondom February 8, 2012
I got my girlfriend to blogulate me, it felt sooooo good!
blogulate by Anonymous September 25, 2003

blobulate 

Blobulate: To alter or have altered, naturally or artificially, the structure, physical and temporal position and other non-definitive or compositional properties of an exisiting blob, even when the existance of that blob is not known.

It should be noted that "blobulate" has no relational meaning to the US slang word, "discombobulate".
I see many uses for this word. If you are out in the foggy woods one night an ill-defined shape takes form quite suddenly in front of you, it would be accurate to say he "blobulated." A modern artist's passable work may be safely praised as an avant garde bobulation. My feeble attempts at the pottery wheel can only be called blobulatory.

This word does not have origins in such words as coagulate (A change from a liquid to a clot). We are not concerned with the clotting as a phyiscal process, we are interesting in the "clot" itself, making blobulate a nonredundancy.

Webster's defines "blob" as a noun denoting 1a. a small drop or lump of something viscid or thick or 1b. a daub or spot of color 2 : something ill-defined or amorphous.

Encarta expands by more specifically defining it as a soft mass, and possibly an indistinct or shapeless form or object."

As for backing my word by way of etymology, let us look at a few words have the ending -ate.

That there are so many is no cooincidence: So many English verbs (and nouns but that's not relevant here) come from Latin verbs whose past participle is -atus. For instance, simulate < L. simulatus pp of simulatus.
Another good example is cooperate, which arrives from <L. cooperatus pp of cooperari. As blob has no known origin, is a verb and a verb of action at that, it would make sense to follow past examples, flirt with a little portmanteau, and voila - I have the perfect new word for what my lava lamp is beginning to do!
blobulate by Rusted Out May 24, 2010

Bilocated 

The act of two individuals identifying someone at two different locations at the same time.
The two friends bilocated John at the theatre and at his house at ten o' clock at night last friday.
Bilocated by jake0520 November 22, 2012

Bilocusage 

The term describes an individual's ability to experience a multinodal mental phenomenology. This means that the person is capable of consciously being present in multiple distinct mental locations simultaneously for an extended period. This capacity, grounded in a complex interaction of cognitive and neurocognitive processes, allows the individual to efficiently divide their attention between two different contexts. As a result, the individual can maintain a sense of presence in each of the physical locations where they mentally project and direct their attention. This phenomenology not only implies a multifocal individual perception but can also manifest as a mental presence that can be objectively perceived by those who share these physical spaces with a subdivision of the individual's thinking. This terminology can be subdivided according to the number of mental divisions, which determines the prefix of the word. "Bi" refers to the ability to be present in two physical-mental places simultaneously. "Tri" for three, and so forth.
He is in a bilocusage, state don`t annoy him.
Bilocusage by Grewed_ May 15, 2024