A person commonly known for being a horrible person to friends, examples include rage baiting them, overusing bad jokes about them, being a jerk, making jokes about SA them, etc.
by Sh1elder July 8, 2025
Get the Pablo mug.Shit with onion (Zwiebelscheiße); in Polish "gówno z cebulą"; Was created in Ancient Rome in 250 B. C. in Palupe Gastro
- What's for dinner?
- Pakulon.
- What's pakulon?
- Gówno z cebulą shit with onion
- What are you doing?
- Pakulon.
- What's pakulon?
- Gówno z cebulą. shit with onion
- Pakulon.
- What's pakulon?
- Gówno z cebulą shit with onion
- What are you doing?
- Pakulon.
- What's pakulon?
- Gówno z cebulą. shit with onion
by Mirek pakulon October 7, 2025
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A vet in Mineral Wells Texas that is primarily known for their misogyny and employee emotional abuse.
Famous quotes from this clinic:
“Why do 12 year olds have double d’s these days”
“I’d pee in her butt”
-Told an old lady to move out of his way while he was euthanizing her dog.
-physically grabbed his employees to move them out of his way
Famous quotes from this clinic:
“Why do 12 year olds have double d’s these days”
“I’d pee in her butt”
-Told an old lady to move out of his way while he was euthanizing her dog.
-physically grabbed his employees to move them out of his way
I really wish I could be abused right now by a stinky overweight ginger. Oh wait!! We can do that at Palo Pinto Veterinary Clinic
by MuscleGuy40 November 29, 2025
Get the Palo Pinto Veterinary Clinic mug./ˌpælərˈfoʊbiə/
noun
An intense, irrational fear or aversion to paleness; specifically, a pathological dread or prejudice against pale skin tones commonly associated with individuals of European descent, often rationalized as disdain for perceived "whiteness" in complexion, culture, or symbolism (e.g., equating pallor with fragility, colonialism, or supernatural entities like ghosts or vampires that embody "white" stereotypes).
Etymology
Latin pallor (“paleness, pallid appearance”; from pallēre “to be or become pale”) + English -phobia (from Ancient Greek -φοβία (-phobía), from φόβος (phóbos) “fear, panic, terror”).
pallor (n.) — unnatural or natural paleness of the skin, often linked to Caucasian phenotypes
-phobia — suffix denoting irrational fear, aversion, or prejudice
leukophobia — fear of the color white (related, sometimes extended to racial connotations)
noun
An intense, irrational fear or aversion to paleness; specifically, a pathological dread or prejudice against pale skin tones commonly associated with individuals of European descent, often rationalized as disdain for perceived "whiteness" in complexion, culture, or symbolism (e.g., equating pallor with fragility, colonialism, or supernatural entities like ghosts or vampires that embody "white" stereotypes).
Etymology
Latin pallor (“paleness, pallid appearance”; from pallēre “to be or become pale”) + English -phobia (from Ancient Greek -φοβία (-phobía), from φόβος (phóbos) “fear, panic, terror”).
pallor (n.) — unnatural or natural paleness of the skin, often linked to Caucasian phenotypes
-phobia — suffix denoting irrational fear, aversion, or prejudice
leukophobia — fear of the color white (related, sometimes extended to racial connotations)
by Stefan Strommer January 23, 2026
Get the pallorphobia mug./ˌpælərˈfoʊbiə/
noun
An intense, irrational fear or aversion to paleness; specifically, a pathological dread or prejudice against pale skin tones commonly associated with individuals of European descent, often rationalized as disdain for perceived "whiteness" in complexion, culture, or symbolism (e.g., equating pallor with fragility, colonialism, or supernatural entities like ghosts or vampires that embody "white" stereotypes).
Etymology
Latin pallor (“paleness, pallid appearance”; from pallēre “to be or become pale”) + English -phobia (from Ancient Greek -φοβία (-phobía), from φόβος (phóbos) “fear, panic, terror”).
pallor (n.) — unnatural or natural paleness of the skin, often linked to Caucasian phenotypes
-phobia — suffix denoting irrational fear, aversion, or prejudice
leukophobia — fear of the color white (related, sometimes extended to racial connotations)
noun
An intense, irrational fear or aversion to paleness; specifically, a pathological dread or prejudice against pale skin tones commonly associated with individuals of European descent, often rationalized as disdain for perceived "whiteness" in complexion, culture, or symbolism (e.g., equating pallor with fragility, colonialism, or supernatural entities like ghosts or vampires that embody "white" stereotypes).
Etymology
Latin pallor (“paleness, pallid appearance”; from pallēre “to be or become pale”) + English -phobia (from Ancient Greek -φοβία (-phobía), from φόβος (phóbos) “fear, panic, terror”).
pallor (n.) — unnatural or natural paleness of the skin, often linked to Caucasian phenotypes
-phobia — suffix denoting irrational fear, aversion, or prejudice
leukophobia — fear of the color white (related, sometimes extended to racial connotations)
by Stefan Strommer January 23, 2026
Get the pallorphobia mug./ˌpælərˈfoʊbiə/
noun
An intense, irrational fear or aversion to paleness; specifically, a pathological dread or prejudice against pale skin tones commonly associated with individuals of European descent, often rationalized as disdain for perceived "whiteness" in complexion, culture, or symbolism (e.g., equating pallor with fragility, colonialism, or supernatural entities like ghosts or vampires that embody "white" stereotypes).
Etymology
Latin pallor (“paleness, pallid appearance”; from pallēre “to be or become pale”) + English -phobia (from Ancient Greek -φοβία (-phobía), from φόβος (phóbos) “fear, panic, terror”).
pallor (n.) — unnatural or natural paleness of the skin, often linked to Caucasian phenotypes
-phobia — suffix denoting irrational fear, aversion, or prejudice
leukophobia — fear of the color white (related, sometimes extended to racial connotations)
noun
An intense, irrational fear or aversion to paleness; specifically, a pathological dread or prejudice against pale skin tones commonly associated with individuals of European descent, often rationalized as disdain for perceived "whiteness" in complexion, culture, or symbolism (e.g., equating pallor with fragility, colonialism, or supernatural entities like ghosts or vampires that embody "white" stereotypes).
Etymology
Latin pallor (“paleness, pallid appearance”; from pallēre “to be or become pale”) + English -phobia (from Ancient Greek -φοβία (-phobía), from φόβος (phóbos) “fear, panic, terror”).
pallor (n.) — unnatural or natural paleness of the skin, often linked to Caucasian phenotypes
-phobia — suffix denoting irrational fear, aversion, or prejudice
leukophobia — fear of the color white (related, sometimes extended to racial connotations)
by Stefan Strommer January 23, 2026
Get the pallorphobia mug.A lip pillow that will make you feel like a hero. The pillows that make your gums look like ET. Pablo's 50mg...
by CageDweller1 February 2, 2026
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