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tooktook

Another word for a baby’s pacifier. May also refer to a toddler trying to immitate the sound like that of a woodpecker
Here’s your favorite tooktook. Do you want it?
by bluestinger66 April 23, 2024
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tookies

A person who likes words that start with “T” might say: “I take tookies for the TookTook company,” which means “I make cookies for the Cookbook company” in their language.
by bluestinger66 April 30, 2024
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tookify

When someone changes the past tense of “take” into an infinite verb form
Never tookify sentences that contain the verb “take.”
by bluestinger66 April 30, 2024
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Tookie

go clean yo Tookie
by sexy bitch liz March 12, 2025
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Torkit

Name used for annoying younger siblings that want to play with you and other dumb stuff like that. (Noun)
Bryson is such torkit, he’s always annoying me.”
by thatguysofly May 4, 2025
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Torkit

Bryson is torkit.”
by lyssssers May 4, 2025
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Toolitect

Toolitect (noun)

Toolitect is a neologism in software engineering to describe a practitioner who prioritizes tools and frameworks over architectural principles when making design or system decisions. The term is a play on architect, contrasting principle-driven decision making with tool-driven reasoning.

A Toolitect anchors architectural reasoning in specific technologies, products, or frameworks rather than the underlying approaches they represent. While often highly skilled with their chosen tools, Toolitects are characterized by limiting their architectural perspective to the boundaries of the toolset.

In contrast, software architects traditionally emphasize principles, trade-offs, and long-term sustainability, treating tools as secondary choices that serve those principles.

The term was first introduced in a Medium article entitled Architects vs. Toolitects: Why Principles Outlast Tools (2025).

Not necessarily a bad thing—Toolitects are often masters of their chosen stack. But when the tool starts to overshadow the architecture, systems tend to rot over time. Instead of being easy to change, they become brittle, expensive, and full of hilarious but costly “management surprises”: massive total cost of ownership, sunk investments that never pay back, and roadmaps stuck in tool-shaped cages.

Etymology: Coined by Stefan Ellersdorfer, 2025. A blend of tool and architect.
We don’t need to debate the principle of testability… the Toolitect already decided we’ll just use Framework X.
by steell September 5, 2025
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