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Caravan

A Caravan is a group of females who jog together in extremely tight fitting leggings and compete with each other to have the most visible camel toe possible.

These majestic ladies can be spotted jogging near a CrossFit or other trendy gym. They are found in packs of 6 to 8 and frequently travel near places of business, such as Starbucks, in order to attract the attention of males and to make their girlfriends or wives jealous of their pronounced coochie wedge.
After having coffee at Starbucks, Gregg said to Hasan, “Holy cow, did you see that Caravan???”

Hasan quickly replied, “Oh mama I sure did, I saw more camel toe today than an Arab Zookeeper.”
by Barry Madonginer June 19, 2025
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caramel

calling someone “caramel” is the same as calling them stupid or just overall annoying. Most commonly used against anyone named “Afriend”
afriend : hi guoys!!!1!1!1!1
me : shut up you caramel monkey
guy : shut up you mad caramel
afriend : guys we should play fisch!1!1!1!1!
me : shut up afriend
guy : shut up you extra caramel ice cream
afriend : *dies*
by ThatFellaSpear July 5, 2025
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Related Words

carabello

Hey cosmotwink, did it carabello when you sausage hooped from the orgyrap?
by x0mbiez July 6, 2025
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Caramel Apples

“My dog got hit by a car so suddenly it was so

tragic”
Caramel Apples bro.”
by Katsukiskneeguh July 16, 2025
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Caravel Sail

The Caravel Sail is a sail that evolved from Lateen Sails both of which have strong Austronesian influences.

Yes — there is strong circumstantial and structural evidence that the caravel sails of the Portuguese, especially their lateen rigging, were influenced by earlier Austronesian sailing technology, particularly the crab-claw sail used on paraw and proa vessels.

Let’s break this down:

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🔹 1. Portuguese Caravel and Lateen Sails

The caravel (15th century) was the main exploration ship of Portugal during the Age of Discovery.

It used lateen sails (triangular sails on angled masts), which allowed it to tack against the wind, unlike square-rigged European ships.

This innovation was critical for long-distance ocean voyages, including to India, Africa, and later Asia and the Philippines.

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🔹 2. Austronesian Crab-Claw Sails — The Original Triangular Sails

Austronesians had already been using crab-claw sails for over 3,000 years before the caravel.

These sails were highly efficient, capable of upwind sailing, speed, and maneuverability.

Found in:

Philippine paraw

Indonesian prahu

Micronesian proa

The mast was often tilted forward, similar to the lateen sail structure.
The Caravel Sail made the Age of Exploration possible.
by Cyclonetrading July 28, 2025
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Caramenta

/ˌkɑ rəˈmɛntə/ noun
Etymology: From Latin carus ‘dear, cherished’ + momentum ‘moment’.
1. A moment recognized, while it is unfolding, as precious and to be cherished.
“Watching the first snow fall with her grandfather was pure caramenta.”
2. The state of cherishing time as it passes, with full awareness of its significance.
“He lived in caramenta, aware of how fleeting the season was.”
by Foste the snowman December 17, 2025
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Caramentive

Caramentive /ˌkɑ rəˈmɛntɪv/ adjective
Etymology: From Latin carus ‘dear, cherished’ + momentum ‘moment’.
1. A reverent, passionate observation of the present, recognizing the moment as one to be cherished in memory.
“It was a caramentive silence, blissfully ushering time to pass.”
“Their caramentive gaze lingered on the fading sunset.”
by Foste the snowman December 29, 2025
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