by Clashroyaldeemee February 4, 2017
Get the deemee mug.fine as fuck, doesnt give a fuck about what she says, pulls all the niggas,funny,active, stay on their phone constantly, loves to have sex, liar, narssistic and kind of mean.
by Dee❤️💜🖤 May 4, 2020
Get the demeecia mug.Person 1: Ay What are you fools talking about.
Person 2: Demreelthangs
Person 2: Okay have a great day
Person 2: Demreelthangs
Person 2: Okay have a great day
by OriginalGangsta187 November 16, 2020
Get the demreelthangs mug.When you accidentally put too much shitpost into your serious work, so now you have to reduce it in order to be taken seriously.
by tok_okienko February 10, 2021
Get the dememeize mug."Hey bro, check out this meme"
"LMAO that's hilarious, thanks bro I was having dememehydration due to lack of memes since my internet is down"
"LMAO that's hilarious, thanks bro I was having dememehydration due to lack of memes since my internet is down"
by bhigredd April 23, 2021
Get the dememehydration mug.Someone who thinks he/she does not have glamorous qualities, but is non indulging wanting to find peace and stay calm. A Demeera thinks he/she is a good friend but is actually hiding cons of friends.
by OverGodLord November 29, 2021
Get the demeera mug.By Lance Carden
- "Mr. Speaker, you have been demmed."
This is how Geoff Plant warned his colleagues in the British Columbia legislature last April about electronic "data mining." He argued that privacy, autonomy, and anonymity are being seriously compromised by global marketers who sort through ever-expanding spheres of seemingly harmless data to cluster people into various demographics - hence the word "demmed."
Not having an archive to a data-mine, I have no way of knowing whether Mr. Plant subscribes to the Utne Reader, or if he had seen a headline in its March/April 2000 issue: "The Beautiful and the Demmed, You are what you buy - wherever you live." But I do know it is in just such fashion that words eventually enter the accepted vocabulary.
First, someone uses the language creatively, even daringly, in an effort to communicate and possibly to entertain - then others, sensing a powerful and/or playful formulation, repeat it and keep it alive.
"Demmed" brings to the sometimes dry and dreary realm of demographics a certain zip and passion - not least because the sound is so easily associated with the words "hemmed" (as in "hemmed in"), "condemned," and most obviously, "damned." In fact, in this euphemistic sense, "demmed" is nothing new. It will be familiar to readers of the "Life and Exploits of the Scarlet Pimpernel," by John Blakeney, who used it liberally in the novel. "That demmed clever woman" and "That demmed elusive Pimpernel" are two chapter headings.
Little did Blakeney know that we would all be demmed.
(http: //csmonitor.com/cgi-bin/ durableRedirect.pl?/ durable/ 2001/02/06/ p16s2.htm)
- "Mr. Speaker, you have been demmed."
This is how Geoff Plant warned his colleagues in the British Columbia legislature last April about electronic "data mining." He argued that privacy, autonomy, and anonymity are being seriously compromised by global marketers who sort through ever-expanding spheres of seemingly harmless data to cluster people into various demographics - hence the word "demmed."
Not having an archive to a data-mine, I have no way of knowing whether Mr. Plant subscribes to the Utne Reader, or if he had seen a headline in its March/April 2000 issue: "The Beautiful and the Demmed, You are what you buy - wherever you live." But I do know it is in just such fashion that words eventually enter the accepted vocabulary.
First, someone uses the language creatively, even daringly, in an effort to communicate and possibly to entertain - then others, sensing a powerful and/or playful formulation, repeat it and keep it alive.
"Demmed" brings to the sometimes dry and dreary realm of demographics a certain zip and passion - not least because the sound is so easily associated with the words "hemmed" (as in "hemmed in"), "condemned," and most obviously, "damned." In fact, in this euphemistic sense, "demmed" is nothing new. It will be familiar to readers of the "Life and Exploits of the Scarlet Pimpernel," by John Blakeney, who used it liberally in the novel. "That demmed clever woman" and "That demmed elusive Pimpernel" are two chapter headings.
Little did Blakeney know that we would all be demmed.
(http: //csmonitor.com/cgi-bin/ durableRedirect.pl?/ durable/ 2001/02/06/ p16s2.htm)
by Omer Ab July 30, 2008
Get the demmed mug.