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Rebello's Ratio

An approximate mathematical formula used to compare and contrast the size of a woman's breasts to the size of her ass. Typically if one is bigger than the other, the woman in question has a skewed or poor tits- to- ass ratio - If the two are relatively proportional, then she has an ideal tits- to- ass ratio. In some cases, the formula can be trivialized when the woman's good looks outweighs both of those factors.
"Sarah's got them titties tho"
"Yeah but her Rebello's ratio is all off, man
by Rebello's Follower December 1, 2024
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Rebello's ratio

An approximate mathematical formula used to compare and contrast the size of a woman's breasts to the size of her ass. Typically if one is bigger than the other, the woman in question has a skewed or poor tits- to- ass ratio - If the two are relatively proportional, then she has an ideal tits- to- ass ratio. In some cases, the formula can be trivialized when the woman's good looks outweighs both of those factors
Sarah's got them titties tho"
"Yeah but her Rebello's ratio is all off, man"
by Sandyrandiiyy December 1, 2024
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Related Words

Fault-to-Ratio Fallacy

Fault-to-Ratio Fallacy
A phrase created by John R. Williams III in early 2024.

The fault-to-ratio fallacy refers to the mistaken reasoning where someone dismisses an individual’s entire set of beliefs or arguments simply because they hold one or a few demonstrably false or flawed views. This fallacy ignores the "ratio" of truths to faults, assuming that one error invalidates all other ideas or arguments, even if some of them are inherently correct or well-founded.
Example:
Person A: "I believe the Earth is flat, but I also believe that 2+2=4."
Person B: "Since you believe the Earth is flat, everything you say must be wrong."

Here, Person B commits the fault-to-ratio fallacy by rejecting Person A’s correct belief (2+2=4) because of their incorrect belief about the shape of the Earth. Instead of evaluating each idea on its own merit, they discredit all ideas based on one fault
by TheMightyRaccoon December 27, 2024
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Keep the ratio

Or “keeping the ratio” is used by frat guys and college bouncers who want to keep the ratio of men and women at the party at a certain amount
A frat guy manning the door at a party rejects a guy but lets in a girl who wants to enter the party.
“Hey man, we gotta keep the ratio. You ain’t coming in.”
by BIGBALLER4206942069 January 18, 2025
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grimace to pimace ratio

“Her grimace to pimace ratio is off”
by pimbimwhim February 5, 2026
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Closely related to logical control, this focuses on the application of "rationality" as a governing principle for social organization and individual behavior. It examines systems (like bureaucracies or economic models) that claim to optimize human activity based on cost-benefit analysis and instrumental reason, often at the expense of human values, ethics, and spontaneity. Control is achieved by making everything subject to a cold calculus of efficiency.
Theory of Rational Social Control Example: A university replaces small, discussion-based humanities seminars with massive, standardized online lectures graded by AI. Administrators justify this as the "rational" choice—it's scalable and cost-effective. This rational social control prioritizes metric-based efficiency over the unquantifiable educational value of personal mentorship and dynamic debate, reshaping the institution's human purpose to fit a sterile, calculable model.
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 7, 2026
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Theory of Rational Paradigms

The extension of paradigm theory to rationality itself—the idea that what counts as rational operates within paradigms, frameworks that shift over time and vary across contexts. The Theory of Rational Paradigms argues that there is no single, timeless standard of rationality; instead, different paradigms define rationality differently. What was rational in one era (burning witches, bleeding patients) is irrational in another; what's rational in one culture (ancestor worship, spirit communication) is irrational in another. This doesn't mean rationality is arbitrary; it means rationality is historical, cultural, and plural. The task is not to find the one true rationality but to understand different rational paradigms.
Example: "He'd thought rationality was the same everywhere—universal, timeless, objective. The Theory of Rational Paradigms showed him otherwise: what counted as rational shifted with time and place. Medieval rationality wasn't failed modern rationality; it was different rationality altogether. He stopped judging other paradigms by his own and started trying to understand them on their terms."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
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