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Brutalia

Surname: to those of royalty from the Brutalian Empire. Popularly identified as being the "Brutalians", they were known for their deadly, "brutal" nature. Geographically placed in the Arabian peninsula, been close to the Byzantines, all historical evidence, pieces of literature, buildings were wiped clean.
Princess Inara Brutalia stared into the sunset.
by Luci Moore February 16, 2022
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Brutalia

Myth of a powerful and infamous empire, "The Brutalian Empire". Stories, have been passed, but upon the emergence of the Byzantines, history has exterminated, all forms of physical evidence of such existence.

The empire was named after the surname of the royal family, and fit into their characteristic of being violent with no mercy. The last known inheritor of the throne said to be one by the name of "Faris v. Brutalia".
If you are from the land of Brutalia, then you were Brutalian.
by Bellatrix Brioche March 9, 2022
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brilliant

A word which in the past meant that something was exceptionally good, or to express great pleasure:

Its strength has been eroded by overuse, and it can now be used to respond to any mildly pleasing news. Somehow the extreme unctuousness and insincerity of this tends to go unrecognized or is an occasion for the self-gratifying feeling that one is being tolerant.
In the olden days:

Smith-"Everyone has the day off tomorrow!"
Jones-"Brilliant!"

Nowadays:

Waiter: "Are you ready to order?"
Customer: "err, yes..."
Waiter: "Brilliant!!!"
by Pistefka September 24, 2009
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Plastic Brilliance

Toy for the select, everlasting batteries, light relief, hits the spot. No real men required.
Why Jackie, I divn't kna whey good satisfaction could be like, was now I have found me plastic brilliance.
by Maladoni April 1, 2006
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Britalian

Britalian is a term that functions as a catchy alternative to the more formal term Anglo-Italian or British Italian. Britalian capitalises on the duplication of the 'it' syllable in both British and Italian to form a cohesive blend of the two words. Britalians are British citizens or residents of Italian ethnic or national origin. Italians have resided in Britain since the times of Emperor Claudius' invasion in AD 43, in modern times however most British residents of Italian origin emigrated or their decendants emirgrated post-WW2 due to the extremly poor economic conditions in Italy. Britalians have long since contributed in every avenue of British culture, yet there is still an underlying xenophobic feeling directed t the Italian community in Britain. The sinking of the steamship SS Arandora Star on 2 July 1940 resulted in the loss of over 700 lives—including 446 British-Italians being deported as undesirable. There are of course several ethnic slurs specific to Italians which will not be listed here, but despite the Anti-Italianism mostly over the last century Italian culture and the Italian sense of identity for all the Italians the world over is still strong.
List of famous Britalians include: British Prime minister in the name of Benjamin Disraeli, the great linguist and lexicographer John Florio. Dante Gabriel Rossetti The poet, painter and translator. . Dame Anita Roddick, DBE founder of The Body Shop, Peter Bonetti 729 appearances for Chelsea, Lanfranco "Frankie" Dettori, MBE the very successful horse racing jockey. Lawrence Dallaglio OBE is a retired English rugby union player World Cup winner in 2003. Joseph William Calzaghe, CBE, MBE is a former professional boxer. . Musicians like Chris Rea, Paolo Nutini, Brian Johnson lead singer for the rock band AC/DC since 1980. Anthony Minghella Academy Award winner for Best Director. Armando Iannucci Scottish-Italian comedian, satirist, writer, director, performer and radio producer who's work includes; I'm Alan Partridge, The Thick Of It, Time Trumpet and the Academy Award nominated In The Loop for Best Adapted Screenplay in 2010. The list of famous British Italians goes on. Britain is an ecclectic mix of different ethnicities, cultures, languages and communities the Italian community in Britain has a strong sense of pride and will continue further itself in culture as well as contribute to British culture.
by tmeucci June 19, 2011
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Brilliantist

1.A name for a job that doesn't exist. First used by professional Brilliantist Joseph Hilton Bunn(1989)
2.A unifying term for many dreams people have. Includes: Outlaws, Poets, Artists, Writers, Jugglers, Bards.
If someone asks you what you would like to do when you're older, and you already are older, or you simply don't know, reply with:

'I want to be a Brilliantist.'
by Tobias Toast February 14, 2007
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brilliantastic

1. Jonny Craig

2. An amazing mixture of brilliant and fantastic. To be used when one adjective is just not good enough to describe how awesome, fascinating, stunning, marvelous and unbelievably good something is.
Boy: You ever hear of Jonny Craig?

Girl: Of course, who hasn't? He's brilliantastic. You wish you could be like him.
by KawaiiKylene April 30, 2011
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