by tayla.m December 14, 2023
Get the panort mug.by Gavmac88 February 23, 2024
Get the Pakoracoma mug.A noun that perpetuates brilliance from every angle shining light upon the lesser lit people in this world; acting as a lighthouse for the lost. Everyone needs a Pabrėžaitė in their life.
by stedestructor March 9, 2024
Get the Pabrėžaitė mug.Panoramify (verb):
1. To transform or expand something, such as a view, experience, or mindset, into a broader or more comprehensive perspective.
2. To enhance an emotional or creative outlook, often by providing new insights or inspiration, much like a muse does for an artist.
3. In a personal context, to influence someone in a way that opens up their understanding of the world or themselves.
1. To transform or expand something, such as a view, experience, or mindset, into a broader or more comprehensive perspective.
2. To enhance an emotional or creative outlook, often by providing new insights or inspiration, much like a muse does for an artist.
3. In a personal context, to influence someone in a way that opens up their understanding of the world or themselves.
Example:
Her words panoramified my whole approach to life, like she was my muse.
Let’s panoramify this idea and see where the inspiration takes us.
Her words panoramified my whole approach to life, like she was my muse.
Let’s panoramify this idea and see where the inspiration takes us.
by Zyximorphix September 25, 2024
Get the Panoramify mug.by ubique420 April 18, 2025
Get the palorasis mug.by Paboygin March 15, 2026
Get the Paboygin mug.1. A parent whose child has died. Unlike ‘widow’ (spouse) or ‘orphan’ (child), English has no word for this loss. ‘Parorphan’ fills the gap: a parent orphaned of their child.
2. By extension, a parent whose child is alive but permanently estranged, absent, or lost to them in life.
2. By extension, a parent whose child is alive but permanently estranged, absent, or lost to them in life.
• After her son’s accident, she became a parorphan.
• He calls himself a parorphan — his daughter still walks the earth, but not with him.
Origin: From parens (Latin, “parent”) + orphanós (Greek, “bereft”). Coined 2025.
• He calls himself a parorphan — his daughter still walks the earth, but not with him.
Origin: From parens (Latin, “parent”) + orphanós (Greek, “bereft”). Coined 2025.
by Shlomo Toren August 21, 2025
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