by booty_cheekeater February 2, 2024
Get the Exavienn mug.Exsaviana is very pretty she doesn’t take no shit for anyone and try to stay to her self keeping the circle small but big and she loves money be more like Exsaviana she so pretty
by Savii November 21, 2023
Get the Exsaviana mug.Exavion is a no-life deadbeat father. He’s a narcissistic pathological liar and loves to cheat on women. He will lie to you about everything in his life and make him seem like an amazing person but really he has a son who doesn’t even know him because he left him when he was a year old. All he does is go ride his skateboard and claim he’s homeless because he was “kicked out” he wasn’t.
by Wenisbeanisrawr February 14, 2025
Get the exavion mug.Pronunciation: /ˈɛks.ə.vi.eɪt/
Definition:
1. To fly out or exit an enclosed space rapidly.
2. To emerge from an interior location by flight (aviation).
3. To ascend or escape from constrained areas aerially.
4. To traverse boundaries or entryways externally by flight (volate).
Significance:
• It defines exiting enclosed spaces by flight (volate).
• It emphasizes rapid aerial egress.
• It identifies boundary-crossing flights (volates).
• It avoids compound and intricate verbs.
• It simplifies descriptions of external flight (volate).
• It improves clarity in aviation contexts.
• It replaces Scandinavian-Germanic, Non-American, foreign, and Anglo-Saxon terms, similar to "fly out".
Past verb: exaviated
Present simple verb: exaviate, exaviates
Present continuous verb: exaviating
Definition:
1. To fly out or exit an enclosed space rapidly.
2. To emerge from an interior location by flight (aviation).
3. To ascend or escape from constrained areas aerially.
4. To traverse boundaries or entryways externally by flight (volate).
Significance:
• It defines exiting enclosed spaces by flight (volate).
• It emphasizes rapid aerial egress.
• It identifies boundary-crossing flights (volates).
• It avoids compound and intricate verbs.
• It simplifies descriptions of external flight (volate).
• It improves clarity in aviation contexts.
• It replaces Scandinavian-Germanic, Non-American, foreign, and Anglo-Saxon terms, similar to "fly out".
Past verb: exaviated
Present simple verb: exaviate, exaviates
Present continuous verb: exaviating
Examples:
• "Birds exaviate nests effortlessly."
• "Planes exaviate hangars during takeoffs."
• "Drones exaviate depots for surveillance."
• "Butterflies exaviate greenhouses naturally."
• "Space shuttles (navettes) exaviate launch pads dramatically."
• "Birds exaviate nests effortlessly."
• "Planes exaviate hangars during takeoffs."
• "Drones exaviate depots for surveillance."
• "Butterflies exaviate greenhouses naturally."
• "Space shuttles (navettes) exaviate launch pads dramatically."
by Dmitrio August 18, 2025
Get the exaviate mug.