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One More Game

When you are playing and your parents and asking you to stop
Parent: Stop playing and clean your room.
Kid: One More game
Parent: NOW!
Kid: FINE
by NO U JACOB February 20, 2020
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more than one virgin of the story

What you hear regarding how/when a gal lost her innocence.
Female celebrities often tell more than one virgin of the story when relating the lurid/sordid details of how they got deflowered.
by QuacksO December 11, 2020
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More Magazine

a women's lifestyle magazine published 10 times a year by the Meredith Corporation3 with a rate base of 1.3 million and a circulation of 1.8 million
In February 2016, the Meredith Corporation announced that More Magazine would cease publication with the April 2016 issue
by SPrice1980 May 8, 2023
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Loves more

D_amon loves more than anyone else ;)
Damon loves more Riley so much, she doesn’t even realize
by This dude she loves May 26, 2024
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who loves who more?

"Who loves who more??"

"Well it's quite obviously Rayne loves Aubs more."
by RAYNEBOOBOOBEAR February 23, 2024
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One-more-stepism

One-more-stepism (noun): A cyclical pattern of project obstruction where the completion of a task is perpetually delayed by the introduction of a new, unforeseen requirement, often presented as the final step. This phenomenon creates an endless loop of "just one more thing," preventing a project or goal from ever reaching a definitive conclusion.

Psychological Underpinnings
One-more-stepism is often a tactic of psychological manipulation, whether intentional or unintentional. It functions by creating a false sense of progress for stakeholders. By constantly presenting a new "final step," the orchestrator maintains the illusion that the project is on the verge of completion. This can:

Provide a sense of comfort and security: Team members or clients are reassured that work is advancing, which can lower scrutiny and quell anxieties about stagnation.

Exploit commitment bias: Individuals who have already invested significant time, energy, or resources are more likely to agree to "one more step" rather than abandon the project.

Serve as a delay tactic: Malicious actors, or "crooks", can use this method to prolong an engagement for their benefit, such as continuing to bill for services, extracting more resources, or avoiding a final deliverable that they cannot produce. It keeps the other party hooked on the promise of a resolution that never arrives.
One-more-stepism is killing our project!
by Biz-Fraud October 14, 2025
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