by Becky[innit] March 02, 2007
by oPsych February 13, 2017
In an effort to motivate and encourage lazy Alderley Edge homies into doing something, going out, down the pub for instance, a short sharp "more" can be a jee-up to instil action.
by BrynD September 26, 2006
A time were you have lost your love and your brain has imploded onto itself. You now have swing from depression to just plan pissed off at everyone. Your heat feels like it has been ripped out of you threw your crying mouth. Your eyes are dryed up and you can't shed a tear anymore because you have already cried them all away. You constintly feel cold because he's not there to hold onto you anymore. You can't get any sleep at night, because you are thinking of all the ways you can get him back, what you have done to make him leave, and how you can kill yourself with little mess and low survival rate. You miss him and don't care for anything anymore.
by Jack Spade. May 30, 2009
A "More-on" is an idea used on forums to avoid the issue of straight up insulting a person, but also suggests one of the many behavioral culprits of a person's inability to constrain themselves. In other words, they will attempt to have the last word at any cost... even to further their own ignorance and resist the potential to grow from a perfectly neutral argumentation. Whilst it is imperative to remain objective (for it is pointless to argue online), too many "more-ons" fail to grasp the benefits of interactions altogether. Narcissism may stem from the depths of this issue, but just as there are narcissistic tendencies, a label doesn't benefit anyone. Use insults and suggestions with caution... be the better "man". Women need to grasp that the internet is where people grow from nowadays... and they also need to stray from pits of despair that corrupts the mind just like onlyfans where only the worst beliefs may arise.
More-on is just an expression that doesn't exist, but I hope this definition points towards resolving our issues by denouncing them with a better, more suitable tone and perspective.
Yes, we will misconstrue someone's intentions online. It also doesn't mean that someone angry is a moron. Temporary statements like... "are you a more-on?" is far less egregious than spewing the claim that one is a moron.
- ishibim
More-on is just an expression that doesn't exist, but I hope this definition points towards resolving our issues by denouncing them with a better, more suitable tone and perspective.
Yes, we will misconstrue someone's intentions online. It also doesn't mean that someone angry is a moron. Temporary statements like... "are you a more-on?" is far less egregious than spewing the claim that one is a moron.
- ishibim
If you don't attempt to understand the intentions of your interlocutor, no matter how angry they may seem (online or not), you are a more-on.
by Draël March 24, 2023
by lilbutterboy April 05, 2018