The first four words of a fraternity cheer, best sung when falling-down drunk, from the 1930s, that my father taught me.
by Dr Bunnygirl June 5, 2021

(n)
made up of China (the People's Republic of China), North Korea (the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea), and South Korea (the Republic of Korea) considered as cancer of Asia
made up of China (the People's Republic of China), North Korea (the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea), and South Korea (the Republic of Korea) considered as cancer of Asia
by Shineya Chong October 28, 2005

by hoelylehoe May 3, 2022

When someone complains, you respond with this. It means something like "Oh, just look at my situatuion."
Friend: "Aw, dangit. I barely get paid anything. I wish I got paid more."
You: "Don't corrupt your horses. I just got laid off."
You: "Don't corrupt your horses. I just got laid off."
by lover1349 December 30, 2009

The creepy version of boyfriend.xml who corrupts everyone and had chances to fight for boyfriend.xml to turn back to normal
by Sonny Cat Gamer August 22, 2022

Nano-corruption (n.): The deliberate manipulation of specific words, timestamps, or administrative details in official documents to create misleading narratives while maintaining plausible deniability. A sophisticated form of corruption that operates at the microscopic level of bureaucratic language.
Example from real case:
Police officers wrote "had" instead of "has" when referring to a valid restraining order that was still active for 19 months, creating a false impression that the order had expired. This nano-corruption in official documentation was part of a larger pattern where officers manipulated precise language in reports to obscure constitutional violations.
Used in a sentence: "The department engaged in nano-corruption by strategically using past tense verbs in their reports to make valid court orders appear expired." Administrative gaslighting, bureaucratic manipulation, paper trail tampering
The term perfectly captures how modern corruption often operates through seemingly minor but intentional manipulations of official language and documentation rather than obvious misconduct.
Police officers wrote "had" instead of "has" when referring to a valid restraining order that was still active for 19 months, creating a false impression that the order had expired. This nano-corruption in official documentation was part of a larger pattern where officers manipulated precise language in reports to obscure constitutional violations.
Used in a sentence: "The department engaged in nano-corruption by strategically using past tense verbs in their reports to make valid court orders appear expired." Administrative gaslighting, bureaucratic manipulation, paper trail tampering
The term perfectly captures how modern corruption often operates through seemingly minor but intentional manipulations of official language and documentation rather than obvious misconduct.
by Watchlist Subject 9596690-00 January 25, 2025

by JP4Gz January 20, 2024
