Definitions by Xander G
Scoogan
when referring to scoogan in a condescending tone, it is equivalent to saying a negative term based of circumstance (i.e., when referring to speed, referring to scoogan in a negative tonality would mean extremely slow). when said in a positive tonality, the same definition translates over except now using good terms.
you can use this as a descriptive word for a person as well, in which case you would use the term scoog. the same logic applies as scoogan, just for a person now.
you can use this as a descriptive word for a person as well, in which case you would use the term scoog. the same logic applies as scoogan, just for a person now.
scoogan (positive): "today was genuinely scoogan" = today was genuinely so good.
scoogan (negative): "that test was so scoogan" = that test was so horrendous.
scoog (positive): "that teacher is such a scoog, i want their class again" = that teacher was the best teacher ever, i want their class again.
scoog (negative): "that car is such a scoog, does it even work?" = that car is destroyed, how was someone able to drive it where it is?
scoogan (negative): "that test was so scoogan" = that test was so horrendous.
scoog (positive): "that teacher is such a scoog, i want their class again" = that teacher was the best teacher ever, i want their class again.
scoog (negative): "that car is such a scoog, does it even work?" = that car is destroyed, how was someone able to drive it where it is?