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Numarolling

The act of tricking someone into viewing the video of Gary Brolsma doing his famous Numa Numa song and dance. This was, of course, inspired by "Rick Rolling". This was Originally created by Eric Eddinger
Jared: Hey do you know where I can find the trailer for The Dark Knight?
Eric: Yeah, right here. *post video of numarolling*
Jared: Dammit Eric...
by Jared Green August 4, 2008
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Nimroz

1. humble, great hearted.
2. calm, content and good natured
3. gentle, enduring, patient
Anyone who has Nimroz in their life is truly blessed.
Nimroz brings a ray of hope and joy into the life of everyone around.

Nimroz is rare to find.
by Mindya April 2, 2013
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Related Words

Nimrodiss

Boy: "That girl is such a nimrodical nimrodiss.."
by COOKIEWOOKY October 3, 2019
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Nimrodical

An adjective describing a stupid hooman. The root word for nimrodical is nimrod.
"You're such a nimrodical nimrod!!"
by COOKIEWOOKY October 3, 2019
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nimrod

A bearded dragon that was named after the sea monster on surface. A very good animal that is only social with people and not other lizards.
Nimrod lives in a 50 gallon aquarium.
by Joey Comerford May 10, 2006
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nimrod

They wanted us to think they shot and killed Nimrod ... but he sneezed. Long live Nimrod!!
by enaiD December 28, 2005
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nimrod

1. A mighty hunter. Now chiefly used in this sense outside the United States.
2. A slow-witted person.

Nimrod was the Biblical founder of Babylon, also considered a mighty hunter. Contrary to the uneducated twits on here, Nimrod did NOT build the tower of Babel (at least the Bible does not claim this, only that the "men of Babylon" tried to build it), and the Bible does NOT claim he tried to kill God.

The Bible ONLY mentions that Nimrod was a son of Cush, the founder of Babylon, and a mighty hunter. Curiously enough, Dictionary.com attests definition 2 to have derived from a Looney Toons episode, wherein Bugs Bunny mocks his adversary, the hunter Elmer Fudd, calling him a "poor little Nimrod". Warner Brothers' Looney Toons cartoons were not written for children, but for literate adults, and often contained literary references children would not understand. Younger generations, mostly illiterate, and having little or no Bible knowledge not gleaned from their moronic parents and half-wit talk radio hosts, probably misunderstood the comment as being a general insult describing the slow-witted Fudd.
Probably from the phrase “poor little Nimrod,” used by the cartoon character Bugs Bunny to mock the hapless hunter Elmer Fudd.
by Rev. Dr. Mycopheles April 18, 2006
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