Skip to main content

ENGERON

(n.) /en-jur-on/

1. A rare, high-energy individual who is a total force of nature. Known for having a resilient "French noble" spirit (the Je Ne Suis Ni Roi energy) while being incredibly humble and down-to-earth. An Engeron is the person you want in your corner because they are fiercely protective of their circle—especially their kids—and will go to the ends of the earth to make sure everyone is safe and smiling.
2. A person who manages to balance being a hardworking professional by day and an EDM-loving, festival-going legend by night. They are likely self-teaching themselves a new language (like Japanese) just for the challenge.
3. The ultimate "vibes" curator. If an Engeron is there, the mood is lifted, the jokes are witty, and the loyalty is 100%.
I was having a rough week, but then John showed up with that Engeron energy and completely turned the night around. That man is truly unstoppable.
by JohnE92 January 27, 2026
mugGet the ENGERON mug.

Engineering Marvel

Incredible Creations that have shaped humanity forever present and in the future
by nvsnu February 2, 2026
mugGet the Engineering Marvel mug.
Related Words

Engineering Marvel

An invention that showcases exceptional ingenuity, skill, and innovation, often pushing the limits of technology or design to solve complex problems.
The F-35 is an engineering marvel in aviation
by nvsnu February 2, 2026
mugGet the Engineering Marvel mug.

Engor

Engor (noun): Slang term describing the swelling and hardening of the clitoris, similar to a male erection (boner), typically caused by arousal or stimulation. It's like a boner, but for females. Since females also get something similar to a boner when aroused, instead of saying boner they say engor.
"I just got an engor from seeing this handsome muscular guy"
by Seaottersteph March 11, 2026
mugGet the Engor mug.

Engineering of Science

A metascientific framework that treats science as something that can be designed, built, and optimized—an engineered system rather than a natural phenomenon. The engineering of science examines how scientific institutions, practices, and systems can be deliberately shaped to produce better outcomes: more reliable knowledge, more efficient discovery, more equitable participation, more socially beneficial research. It draws on insights from metascience, sociology of science, and science policy to ask practical questions: How should peer review be designed? What funding mechanisms produce the best science? How can scientific careers be structured to encourage innovation while maintaining rigor? How can scientific institutions be made more resilient, more adaptive, more just? The engineering of science treats science as a human artifact—something we have built and can rebuild—rather than something we simply study and accept.
Example: "His engineering of science proposal redesigned the grant review process to reduce bias and increase innovation—treating funding decisions not as natural occurrences but as systems that could be optimized like any other engineered system."
by Dumu The Void March 16, 2026
mugGet the Engineering of Science mug.

Engrish

1. English spoken by non-native speakers
2. AAVE, idk why it counts
3. Polandball speak
1. Person 1: “I took a day of rife!” Person 2: “Wat? You speak Engrish!”
2. Person 1: “Ok ma homies, I wanna get that thin’ or I'm gettin’ mad!”
3. “Polan cannot into space”
by Polandballer May 14, 2025
mugGet the Engrish mug.

Engrate

Engrate (verb, transitive — neologism)
/en·grāt/

To cause someone to feel gratitude, especially through a meaningful act, gift, or sacrifice.

Morphologically echoes engraved, ingrained, and grateful
Example Usages:
“Her gesture engrated me more than words could express.”

“That letter didn’t just thank me — it engrated me.”

“Their patience through my illness engrates me to this day.”

Engrated (participle or adjective)
Having been made to feel grateful; emotionally marked by the receipt of something deeply affecting.

Example Usages:
“I was engrated by their forgiveness.”

“She stood silent and engrated by the sacrifice.”

“An engrated look passed over him — one of stunned thanks.”

Etymology:
From the Latin-rooted “gratus” (pleasing, thankful)

With the prefix “en-” (to cause to be)
by Gygux25 June 18, 2025
mugGet the Engrate mug.

Share this definition

Sign in to vote

We'll email you a link to sign in instantly.

Or

Check your email

We sent a link to

Open your email