Quite possibly the best political satire ever written. This, of course, comes from the genius that is George orwell who has also written the master.piece 1984
Basically, this is the russian revolution but with farm animals.
everythings in it; Stalin (Napoleon in the book) Propaganda (Squealer), Trotsky (Snowball) as well as a number of other people and groups of people who are represented by animals, humans and objects.
The symbolism in this book is great. If your know a minimal amount about Russia in those days, then you'll love how this book makes it easy to understand.
In fact, this book is so good that its still on the top 50 list for top sellers. Also, it is a good read for children as well as intelligent adults.
Now, go read it! Its about a 100 pages so it won't take up all your time.
Basically, this is the russian revolution but with farm animals.
everythings in it; Stalin (Napoleon in the book) Propaganda (Squealer), Trotsky (Snowball) as well as a number of other people and groups of people who are represented by animals, humans and objects.
The symbolism in this book is great. If your know a minimal amount about Russia in those days, then you'll love how this book makes it easy to understand.
In fact, this book is so good that its still on the top 50 list for top sellers. Also, it is a good read for children as well as intelligent adults.
Now, go read it! Its about a 100 pages so it won't take up all your time.
by mrpopenfresh April 23, 2004
used as an infinitive verb as is "to animal farm" it. A reference to George Orwell's novel by the same title and signifies the sudden changing of administrative policies or rules without any acknowledgement of change. In Orwell's novel, when the pigs in charge changed the rules, they simply painted over the old rules at night while the rest of the animals were sleeping. When the animals awoke, the new rules were now the only rules, and no discussion of change was permitted. Change was never communicated and was actively denied. Thus, to "animal farm it" means to change the rules and then to pretend it was always that way and that the rule breaker was an idiot for assuming they knew the rules.
e.g. To animal farm, I.e. when a change is made to a digital document and the change is not tracked so that it appears as if no change occurred because there is no record of the previous version or the change; there is simply change.
by The Doctor is In September 17, 2013
by matt March 30, 2004
Supposedly a porn film featuring bestiality, but little more than an urban myth circulating endlessly amongst braindead chav schoolboys all over England since the 1980s.
"Seen nat film Animal Farm, then, where a bloke fucks a chicken, like?"
"No I haven't you sad janner twat, it doesn't exist."
"No I haven't you sad janner twat, it doesn't exist."
by TC Raymond July 21, 2005
I had to read this book for some prick in English class. I did not read most of the book, but still took a test and wrote a report on that book and answered questions about each chapter. Oh, this guy hates me so much, he says I never turned in the book and wants me to pay $20 for it.
"Two legs good, four legs bad. So kill those animals!"
I think that is how it went, but I would not know since I did not read the book.
I think that is how it went, but I would not know since I did not read the book.
by Matt. H. April 11, 2005
A world where the Trumpster’s piggie-men cabinet have become increasingly delusional and grandiose with greed and power until their downfall begins with the patriotic actions of a brave whistleblower.
The Extortionist in Chief, AG Barrtard, Mike Pompous Asshole and Rudy Tudy Ungluedy comprise the main characters in the nonfiction tale, “Animal Farm 2019.”
by Dr Bunnygirl September 30, 2019
A slang phrase referring to a whimsical or uniquely stupid action or series of actions, more commonly used within Fortnite to describe a peculiar play style.
The phrase is completely incoherent, it's possible it references the George Orwell novel "Animal Farm", however there is no clear connection between how the phrase is used and the book itself.
It originated within in-game voice chats for the Fortnite game mode Llama Wars describing a player who used a combination of balloons and an explosive bow to eliminate players from above, from there it spread to other lobbies and game modes.
The phrase is completely incoherent, it's possible it references the George Orwell novel "Animal Farm", however there is no clear connection between how the phrase is used and the book itself.
It originated within in-game voice chats for the Fortnite game mode Llama Wars describing a player who used a combination of balloons and an explosive bow to eliminate players from above, from there it spread to other lobbies and game modes.
by Plastics eated April 24, 2023