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masaratsu 

the coolest person ever to exist ever in all the time of the earth creation
big thighs (rated 6/10 by a thigh connoisseur, which is actually good), i can talk and stuff.
bruh dude: masaratsu is cool
masaratsu: yeah, ik, ty man
masaratsu by masaratsu October 4, 2020

Mesa rat 

Slang name for a group of folks who live West of the Rio Grande Gorge near Taos in the sage brush Mesa. Outlaws, misfits, mad max wannabees, big time pot smokers, dready and filthy. Wear old combat boots, lots of tats and face jewelry.
"Those Damn Mesa rats are cleaning their feet in the temple's bathrooms". "I tried to get out of my car to go to the cafe and a mesa rat is trying to bum some pot of me"
Mesa rat by psuedo nymph December 2, 2011

megarattled

Being so unbelievably pissed off that there is only one word to describe your unbridled rage, megarattled.
Dude, I handed in my exam and forgot to do the back page! I'm megarattled!
megarattled by pedosssa February 18, 2011

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.”
It is said of the situation where a person has the bad luck to make contact with his testicles against an undefined surface or object, intentioned or not.
Given the nature of the word, it is more appropriate to design cases where the interaction is made with a moving object, for example, a ball.
Although it is extremely painful for the victim, it tends to be considerably funny to people who witness it.
Today in the baseball game the pitcher took a nutshot; the baseball hit him in the nuts.

Man, I just watched the funniest nutshot video ever.
Nutshot by Uberflaven March 1, 2009
Word of the Day on June 26, 2026