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english 10 at prisms

The worst experience one can face with the english language
English 10 at prisms was so bad, that orange man started to sound better.
by tseriessupporter May 2, 2019
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Formal English

(n.) A dialect of French.
Formal English loves to ostracize short Germanic words and replace them with long synonyms of Latin and Greek origin, with the occasional Germanic influence, i.e. French.
by sillybirdspidercreature February 25, 2010
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loel english

a weird mix between british english and absolute nonsense
i was talking to my friend michael and he started speaking loel english

person 1: nan sorcha ball flynt after one one landey spaff nan
person 2: what the fuck are you saying

person 3: he’s speaking loel english you twat
by yunggonZalo December 19, 2020
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Neo-English

A new dialect of English that developed in the early 2000’s and is becoming more prominent in the 2020’s, words such as pog, cap, boomer, etc replaced their modern English counterparts starting in the late 2010’s
Guy: Sorry I don’t speak 2020.

Other guy: it’s called Neo-English

Guy: eat shit and die

Other guy: OKAY BOOMER
by Obiwan723 January 22, 2021
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Olde english

a malt liquor made by the Olde English 800 brewing company in Milwakee Wisconson. Popuar with ghetto youths, bums and alcoholics for its high alcohol to price ratio.
man i drank to fourties and ended up shooting my sugar ray into her purple star. (see dictionary for other definitions)
by Pubert Qubert Quakenbush April 3, 2003
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english

the most expressive language on the face of the earth. although widely insulted for it's strange spelling and grammar, no other major language on earth can convey ideas as precisely or as diversely as the english language. This is largely because of the huge amount of words that make up the english language, which dwarfs the vocabularies of other languages by comparison.

it's name is derived from the anglo-saxons.
anglo-saxon--->anglish--->english
as a kid i grew up speaking spanish. thankfully, i learned english and now i only speak spanish when i have no other choice.
by bobertdude December 30, 2007
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Urban English

The form of english spoken by people in low income housing and the projects. Words such as "funeralize", "conversate", "nawmean", "aw'ight", and so on are all examples of uban english.
He grew up in the projects and speaks Urban English
by legacygeek June 26, 2009
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