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Joints not points

Smoking weed instead of harder drugs like method or crack.
Person 1:Wanna smoke some meth?
Person 2: nah man, "Joints not points" for me.

Joints not points is just someone who prefers weed over any other drugs.
by JointsNotPoints May 5, 2023
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60 Point Team

A fantasy baseball team that dwells in the cellar and has to fight, tooth and nail to avoid the OLRL protection penalty.
Oh man !! Billy has a 60 point team. He has a lot of power and shaky closers , but all his guys hit .226 and are banged up.
by rotoking April 10, 2011
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Lad points

A conceptual, immaterial currency of social status awarded by males to males who engage in certain traditionally masculine behaviours (especially behaviours that demonstrate daring, bravery in battle, sexual prowess, and disregard for authority).
James: "Lad points for anybody who asks out that fit bird over there."
Steve: *proceeds to ask out that fit bird over there"
by shalkh October 8, 2025
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what’s your point

“ your so tall..... what’s your point ?”
by a sexy rat who is a rat November 30, 2020
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hood point

Like a good point, but one that reflects a manner of thinking consistent with life in the hood.
Bob: It's hot af outside.
John: Bro just put some ice in the fan!

Bob: Hood point!
by rosefly June 11, 2019
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18 point meeting

I am not available this afternoon as I have an 18 point meeting offsite.
by RainDogs June 9, 2018
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moo point

A moo point or a mooed point is just a lingual bastardization of a moot point:
It was originally Joey Tribbiani (Friends) who used the phrase, it was a joke, a twist on “moot point.”

A moot point basically doesn’t matter: it’s not worth discussing because it just doesn’t apply for whatever reason.

In legal jargon, it means your argument is inapropo: it doesn’t apply & it’s not timely, so it’s actually NOT an argument because it’s inapplicable - not necessarily completely illogical; but for some reason, it doesn’t apply to the case. Sometimes the statute of limitations has run & that law no longer applies, so the point is moot, dead.

Origin (1500’s): a moot point needed group discussion and debate.

Modern use: a moot point is only up for debate in hypothetical cases, as in law school/intellectual debate.(See moot court.)

However, in our modern legal system, a moot point is considered:
-inapplicable (for whatever reason,) irrelevant
-automatically an unacceptable argument

-definitely not up for debate in the courtroom: considered a waste of the court’s time & resources

-embarrassing if relied upon, as the atty didn’t do their homework

NOT to be confused with a moot point:

“Mute” means silent. A moot point is not discussed: it’s already understood & automatically accepted legally, so it doesn’t need to be addressed. It’s a given.
Your argument is irrelevant, it’s a moo point: If a cow mooed it would mean the same thing, absolutely nothing.
by anonymous September 8, 2025
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