1. Someone who is scared to use profanity
2. Someone who doesn´t feel comfortable with using profanity
3. Someone who doesn´t use profanity on a regular basis
4. Someone who never used profanity
5. Someone who references "bad words", like fuck, as the F-word
6. Someone who thinks the words like "damn" and "ass" are "bad words"
2. Someone who doesn´t feel comfortable with using profanity
3. Someone who doesn´t use profanity on a regular basis
4. Someone who never used profanity
5. Someone who references "bad words", like fuck, as the F-word
6. Someone who thinks the words like "damn" and "ass" are "bad words"
Fuck
Cock
Pussy
Dick
Ass
Asshole
Buttfuck
Fucking
Bitch
Nigga (fo´ shigga)
Shit
Piss
Tits
Etc.
Hey look, I used profanity you Profanity Pussy
Cock
Pussy
Dick
Ass
Asshole
Buttfuck
Fucking
Bitch
Nigga (fo´ shigga)
Shit
Piss
Tits
Etc.
Hey look, I used profanity you Profanity Pussy
by I´mYoGrandpaSoListenUp May 21, 2012
Get the Profanity Pussy mug.An anti-racist, pro-choice, pro-gay, pro-feminist punk band from Canada. Blast out high tempo melodic hardcore-tinged punk.
by Servant Of Progress October 22, 2004
Get the Propagandhi mug.Related Words
Profag
• Profagonist
• profaganda
• profaginis
• propaganda
• Profanity
• protagonist
• profa
• profane
• profandity
1.The act of inserting a "bad word", profanity, usually some derivative of the word "fuck," into the middle of an ordinary word/sentence to display ones fustration, emotion, opinion.
-See Turrets.
-See Turrets.
by CrunkMonk3y January 1, 2012
Get the Profanitization mug.(Profa) is a slang term for the media organization that created and the individuals who propelled the word (Antifa) into common English vernacular.
(Profa) is an individual or media organization which identifies with pro-fascist ideology.
They are creators of the conservative buzzword (Antifa) or anti-fascists.
In order to have something be labeled with the prefix “anti-“ there must be an established subject for the anti to be in front of. The subject of course is (fascism). People who are (profa) are Fascists that use (propaganda) and (rhetoric) to label their enemies in order to create an (us-vs-them) mentality necessary for (fascism) to take hold in a country.
(Profa) is an individual or media organization which identifies with pro-fascist ideology.
They are creators of the conservative buzzword (Antifa) or anti-fascists.
In order to have something be labeled with the prefix “anti-“ there must be an established subject for the anti to be in front of. The subject of course is (fascism). People who are (profa) are Fascists that use (propaganda) and (rhetoric) to label their enemies in order to create an (us-vs-them) mentality necessary for (fascism) to take hold in a country.
The (Profa) is a large media conglomerate that produces (propaganda) and (rhetoric) to further (fascism) in the west.
My former (Facebook) friend believes (profa) rhetoric.
My former (Facebook) friend believes (profa) rhetoric.
by Bobtom July 6, 2020
Get the Profa mug.1. An exploitation of electronic censorship programs' limmited scope in preventing profane language and letting users enter text at the same time.
by Al October 12, 2003
Get the Profanity Loophole mug.John: Hey, Jack, have you listened to "Mo Bamba" by Sheck Wes?
Jack: No way, dude, that's profanity soup.
Jack: No way, dude, that's profanity soup.
by Sassy Sasha November 19, 2018
Get the profanity soup mug.1. An idealized town, hamlet or village built solely for propaganda purposes -- usually by a totalitarian or autocratic government.
The most famous example is Kijŏng-dong ("Peace Village"), a mostly uninhabited village located in North Korea just beyond the demilitarized zone. It was built in the 1950s to encourage South Koreans to defect to North Korea. (Fat chance.) Officially, Kijŏng-dong is a 200-family collective farming town with all the amenities. In reality, it is used to house DPRK soldiers who patrol the DMZ. The world's tallest flagpole stands nearby.
2. A Propaganda Village is a real-life version of a "Potemkin Village." According to myth, Russian ministry Grigory Potyomkin tried to impress Empress Catherine II in 1787 during her visit to Crimea by building fake peasant buildings (facades only) along her travel route. Historians now believe this was a rumor drummed up by Potyomkin's enemies. What he really did was get local peasants to spruce up their homes in advance of the monarch's visit.
The most famous example is Kijŏng-dong ("Peace Village"), a mostly uninhabited village located in North Korea just beyond the demilitarized zone. It was built in the 1950s to encourage South Koreans to defect to North Korea. (Fat chance.) Officially, Kijŏng-dong is a 200-family collective farming town with all the amenities. In reality, it is used to house DPRK soldiers who patrol the DMZ. The world's tallest flagpole stands nearby.
2. A Propaganda Village is a real-life version of a "Potemkin Village." According to myth, Russian ministry Grigory Potyomkin tried to impress Empress Catherine II in 1787 during her visit to Crimea by building fake peasant buildings (facades only) along her travel route. Historians now believe this was a rumor drummed up by Potyomkin's enemies. What he really did was get local peasants to spruce up their homes in advance of the monarch's visit.
by Peter Kobs June 10, 2010
Get the Propaganda Village mug.