When you are editing a paper or any text on a computer and instead of deleting the whole world you are replacing, you instead delete only the necessary letters and fill them in with letters to make your new word.
When she typed, annie was always word recycling. While she typed, she erased the 'i' 'v' and 'n' in the word 'relivant' and added a 'ed' to the end to make 'related':
relivant
relat
related
relivant
relat
related
by <3 pantie <3 March 9, 2010

simply a cooler way to say explain.
or for some people, their vocabulary is so minute that this is how they are able to say "explain".
or for some people, their vocabulary is so minute that this is how they are able to say "explain".
Erika Erika Erika- "i can't tell you what he did, it's just to hard to word it up."
*as in while texting;
"no man, i'll just tell you tomorrow, i'm too lazy to word it up.
*as in while texting;
"no man, i'll just tell you tomorrow, i'm too lazy to word it up.
by flagma April 18, 2010

pronunciation: wurd spaz·uuuhhh·ummmm
noun
desperately throwing letters together in the hope that spell check will know what you mean and bail you out.
Related: grammar flailing, incompetence
noun
desperately throwing letters together in the hope that spell check will know what you mean and bail you out.
Related: grammar flailing, incompetence
by Rude Horse August 20, 2018

1. False word is when some people make rumors about you that is not true.
2. False word is also when someone talks shit about you behind your back.
The phrase comes from streets, but now also used by rappers to describe those kinds of people.
2. False word is also when someone talks shit about you behind your back.
The phrase comes from streets, but now also used by rappers to describe those kinds of people.
- Yo, that guy was trying to false word by saying bullshit about you.
- My homies won't listen to him.
- Nobody will.
- My homies won't listen to him.
- Nobody will.
by The geniusest December 22, 2015

The act of using terms, especially, but not limited to, ones that are more unfamiliar and “intellectual” sounding, in order to give a stance more clout, and make an opposing stance feel less valid. It often times makes the user of the term feel superior, and “objectively” correct.
This is usually seen when person A is trying to make an opposing argument against person B, and they try to solidify their stance as the one true stance by ending their argument with something like, “what you’re talking about is called insert word-washing term, and it’s actually a insert descriptive term fallacy.
This is usually seen when person A is trying to make an opposing argument against person B, and they try to solidify their stance as the one true stance by ending their argument with something like, “what you’re talking about is called insert word-washing term, and it’s actually a insert descriptive term fallacy.
Don’t generalize the way that I think about this situation with some 10 dollar word. It’s far more complicated than that. You’re just trying to word-wash me.
by Walter Greene March 5, 2022

Person1: Wat's up how did the quarrel go with him?
Person2: I just got fucking Murdered by words he is too intelectual for me
Person2: I just got fucking Murdered by words he is too intelectual for me
by Lil bitch that has a ditch May 26, 2020

You don’t have a danger word? Ya man, I say “teacup” and she knows to back off but if I say “please” that bitch knows to crank it up.
by Staygoldburg June 11, 2021
