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meat to scene ratio 

An unit of measure identified and studied by the philosopher Birdman, used primarily in his extensive scientific studies in the field of cockology.

It measures how much meat (penis) is present in a given scene, facilitating the analysis of the subjects in said scene.
Being a quantitative measurement however, it treats all meat (bbc or otherwise) the same.

According to lost journals by the philosopher, the ratio is calculated individually for each female subject and care must be had in cases where double(or triple) meat specials are at play.
you used to have such a low meat to scene ratio when i met you, look at you now!

meatcation 

A vacation revolving solely around mass consumption of meat.
Man, I just got back from Kansas City, it was the best meatcation ever! I still have the meat sweats.
meatcation by Dec1001 August 10, 2016

menatration 

When one dude penatrates another dude
My ass is killing me from that deep menatration.
menatration by stocks on 2nd August 3, 2010

Metarationality

Rationality about rationality—the systematic examination of what rationality is, how it operates, how it varies across contexts, and how it relates to other modes of thought. Metarationality asks second-order questions: What counts as rational in different domains? How do rational standards change over time? How do different cultures conceptualize rationality? What are the limits of rational thought? How does rationality relate to emotion, intuition, tradition, and faith? It also examines pathologies of rationality—how rational systems can produce irrational outcomes, how claims to rationality can mask power, how rational standards can exclude legitimate ways of knowing. Metarationality is rationality reflecting on itself, seeking not just to be rational but to understand what rationality is and what it might become.
Example: "Her metarationality analysis showed how the 'rationality' of modern economics excludes considerations of justice, sustainability, and human flourishing—not because these are irrational, but because the particular rationality of economics has been built to exclude them."

Metarational Literacy

The capacity to reflect on the nature, limits, and diversity of rationality itself. A metarationally literate person understands that there is no single, universal “reason” but multiple rationalities adapted to different contexts—scientific, legal, moral, everyday. They can evaluate when different standards of reason apply, recognize the historical and cultural formation of rational norms, and critically assess claims that equate their own rationality with Reason itself.
Example: “Her metarational literacy helped her navigate the debate between economists and ecologists: she saw that both were rational, but each operated within different frameworks of value, time, and evidence.”

love peace and chicken grease 

"another of sayin peace out or good bye"
Talk to ya later......Love, Peace, and Chicken Grease
Word of the Day on June 24, 2026