Skip to main content
Verb: (Alternatively signonym).

When you're just learning new languages to say you're a 6 languager, but all your speed-learning is of synonyms.

Noun:

When in China learn Sinonyms so you can say the same things again over there.

Sino: (For Chinese, and for "Sign", as in Chinese Signs).
Verb: "You just Sinonymed yourself on interregional baby talk"

Why don't you just Chinese yourself some Sinonyms.
Sinonym by mattanaw July 11, 2022
Related Words
A similar-meaning word dat overly-critical/righteous people wag a disapproving finger and/or cluck their tongues about if you utter it.
Before you come down on someone too much about seemingly-unacceptable word-choices, be sure to consider whether you sometimes use sinonyms yourself.
sinonym by QuacksO July 1, 2020

synonimh 

A substitute word dat you use to diplomatically avoid having to come right out and say dat someone is nutso.
Phrases like, "He's seeing someone about that" or "He's on medication" could loosely be termed as "synonimh sayings" for more-humiliating word-choices to mean dat da person under discussion isn't playing wif a full deck.
synonimh by QuacksO May 13, 2022

Sinnimol 

Describes a demented lady from yeovil, with autistic children.

Only call people a sinnimol if they autistic children and post Joker and Batman quotes on Facebook.
She's such a Sinnimol, she posted so many Joker quotes on her Facebook the other day...
Sinnimol by Jerin Jaimon December 18, 2023
sin·an·i·mous
/sɪnˈænɪməs/
adjective
1. Lacking the essential spirit or vital force of life; profoundly hollow.
2. Characterized by a state of being ‘without soul’; specifically referring to a person or object that remains physically present but is spiritually or emotionally vacant.

Etymology
From the Latin sine (“without”) + animus (“soul, mind, breath of life”). Unlike inanimate (which describes objects that have never possessed life), sinanimous implies a state of deprivation or the active absence of a spirit that ought to be there.

Usage Note
While inanimate is a clinical or scientific term for non-living matter (e.g., rocks, water), sinanimous is a literary or philosophical term used to describe a haunting or unnatural lack of vitality in things that typically possess it (e.g., a crowd, a home, or a human gaze).
“The abandoned cathedral felt sinanimus, as if the very air had forgotten how to carry sound.”
Sinanimus by AcroXP March 20, 2026

How bout dem knicks? 

A phrase referring twoard the New York Knicks.
Its usually said to break an unplesent moment of silence.
Guy 1: I think I may be gay.
Guy 2: ...
Guy 1: ...
Guy 2: How bout dem knicks?
How bout dem knicks? by Flame060 March 28, 2005
Word of the Day on June 8, 2026