the act of making any word an action word even if the real definition of the word is a pro-noun, prepositions, noun, or adjectives and sometimes verbs
we have to man the fort.
we were out all night clubbing.
I gotta go hit the books and get studified.
when I speak I like to verberize.
we were out all night clubbing.
I gotta go hit the books and get studified.
when I speak I like to verberize.
by Legion Escobar November 12, 2007
Get the verberize mug.Verneice is a really sexy person.Shes the one to light up your day and a room no matter what.You need a verneice.She will always be there for you no matter how hard things get.Verneice is unbelievable kind with a little anger issues but mostly the most caring perosn you'll ever meet.If u have a Verneice u should keep her.She is the perfect girlfriend don't lose a Verneice unless u wanna be sad .She can get to carried away with a lot of jealousy but shows the love she has for her man/women.Even if u find a girl always assume Verneice is the name.She an angel and a miracle we all have been waiting for.Verneice had an amazing body .
"Yo,Verneice beat this girl ass for trying to take Jason away from her".Ayo I told y'all she mad jealous for nun that's how she is that's why I love her .
by baddie~vm August 5, 2017
Get the verneice mug.by luvcqts July 9, 2022
Get the vermerin mug.1. Irish: reduced Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó hEachthighearna ‘descendant of Eachthighearna’, a personal name meaning ‘lord of horses’, from each ‘horse’ + tighearna ‘master’, ‘lord’. This name is most common in southwestern Ireland.
2. Irish: Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó hUidhrín (see Herron).
3. English: variant of Heron 1.
4. English: topographic name for someone who lived by a bend in a river or in a recess in a hill, both of which are meanings of Middle English herne (Old English hyrne). It may also be a habitational name from any of the various places, such as Herne in Kent and Hurn in Dorset, which are named with the Old English word. Its exact original sense and its etymology are not clear; it may be a derivative of horn ‘horn’.
5. English: habitational name from Herne in Bedfordshire, so called from the dative plural (originally used after a preposition) of Old English hær ‘stone’.
2. Irish: Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó hUidhrín (see Herron).
3. English: variant of Heron 1.
4. English: topographic name for someone who lived by a bend in a river or in a recess in a hill, both of which are meanings of Middle English herne (Old English hyrne). It may also be a habitational name from any of the various places, such as Herne in Kent and Hurn in Dorset, which are named with the Old English word. Its exact original sense and its etymology are not clear; it may be a derivative of horn ‘horn’.
5. English: habitational name from Herne in Bedfordshire, so called from the dative plural (originally used after a preposition) of Old English hær ‘stone’.
by rawlangs February 3, 2010
Get the Verneita mug.by Xenophon March 8, 2014
Get the verberia mug.Venerick is a lil bitch ass boy
by Yay yea detway August 24, 2017
Get the venerick mug.