Skip to main content

Snow-Globing

The art of partaking in Bukkake in zero gravity, utilizing the propulsion of the male ejaculate from considerable distance.
The interior of the shuttle ended up looking like a Winter Wonderland after Freddy and the Crew had finished Snow-Globing their participant.
by Snow-Globing February 22, 2015
mugGet the Snow-Globing mug.

light-globing

A particular style of fellatio where the testicles are twisted.
"Honey are you in the mood for some light-globing?"
by SARCHANGELUS February 14, 2017
mugGet the light-globing mug.
Related Words

Snow-globing

When a guy finishes in partners mouth and shakes their head vigorously before they swallow.
He was snow-globing me so hard I thought my head was gonna pop off.
by nonnahs44 February 20, 2018
mugGet the Snow-globing mug.

James Grobnik

The sexiest guy alive, peng jawline with a great personality. Rugby god and has great shoulders. Also don’t mess with him cause he’s hard asf. Finally, he’s got the fittest girlfriend in the world, I think I’m done now 😂
OMFG is that James Grobnik 🤤
by Sexy Mofo Grobbers February 2, 2019
mugGet the James Grobnik mug.

Minion Groping

The act of stroking a toy minion to get sexual satisfaction
Man that minion groping was the shit
by Jeopardymama February 2, 2020
mugGet the Minion Groping mug.

clinica globins gremilins

as pessoas mais engracadas que tem
meu deus sao as pessoas mais engracadas que existem clinica globins gremilins!
by volkomito March 20, 2022
mugGet the clinica globins gremilins mug.

Fast Growing Hierarchy

The fast growing hierarchy (shortened to FGH) is a method of defining large numbers. It takes in two inputs.

We define f(0,n) = n+1. For example: f(0,3) = 4. Next step is iteration. f(1,n) is f(0,f(0...f(0,n)...)) where f(0,...) is iterated n times. For example, f(1,2) = f(0,f(0,2)) = 4. Same rules for f(m,n).

Now let's define what ordinals are. Very simplified, they're a kind of infinity.
Consider this: |||....|

This has infinite sticks, but there's a 1st stick, 2nd stick... the last stick is the ωth stick. You can have ω+1, ω+2, ω+3 etc too. For our purposes, a limit ordinal is an ordinal that has no finite part at the end (so ω+3 is not a limit ordinal but ω×3 is.).

So how can we use this within FGH? We need to define a fundamental sequence (FS). An FS is the steps we take to reach a new limit ordinal. So the FS for ω is 0,1,2... and for ω×2 it's ω,ω+1,ω+2...
We can write this as: ωn = n, ω×2n = ω+n, ω^2n = ω×n and so on. There are more ordinals, but it'll do for our purposes.

This is not the only system for an FS. There's more, but I cannot fit it in an entry.

Now consider an ordinal α. Now FGH can be defined concretely:
for f(α,n):
if α is 0, it is n+1.
if α is not a limit ordinal, it is f(α-1,f(α-1...f(α-1,n)...)) where f(α-1,...) is iterated n times.
if α is a limit ordinal, it is f(αn,n).

Let's do an example: f(ω,3) = f(3,3) = f(2,f(2,f(2,3))). I know that f(2,n) = n×2^n, so it's 1.804356 × 10^15151336, which is HUGE! Imagine how large f(ω,10) is.
Graham's Number is approximately equal to f(ω+1,3) within the Fast Growing Hierarchy.
by cyclopentane December 1, 2022
mugGet the Fast Growing Hierarchy mug.

Share this definition

Sign in to vote

We'll email you a link to sign in instantly.

Or

Check your email

We sent a link to

Open your email