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sephley

Is the best Beat Saber YouTuber on this planet. Can hit Cycle and a proper British Bimbo.

Also known as the One Beat Saberer.
OMG, did you see the new Video of Sephley?
by sirlini December 2, 2024
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septosecond

a tiny amount of time that can be hyperbolic, or actually barely a second
"dude i wasn't even talking for a septosecond before you interrupted me!"
by altostar482 December 9, 2024
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September 21

September 21 is the day of remembering. It started in 1978, when Earth, Wind & Fire released a song that became No. 1 on the US Billboard Hot R&B Songs chart. The name of the song is named September.
Person 1- "Hey! It's September 21!"
Person 2- "Alright, so?"
*Music starts playing*
Person 1- "Do you remember?"
Person 3- "The twenty first time of September?"
Person 4- "Ba-dee-ya, say do you remember?"
Person 2- "Wtf"
by iAmARedBird December 11, 2024
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Sepiuta

Mean someone that make joke for everyone
by anonymous January 17, 2025
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septant

Pronunciation: /ˈsɛp.tənt/
Definition:
1. The cardinal number symbol: 17.
2. A group, set, or series of seventeen humans or entities; a prime-numbered unit beyond standard duodecimal or hexadecimal sets.
3. A quantity often associated with irregular or specialized groupings, such as specific sports squad (equipe) sizes or unique organizational units.
4. Denoting a structure based on seventeen components, often reflecting a prime number's indivisibility and uniqueness.

Significance:
• It defines the quantity seventeen with systematic regularity and clarity.
• It emphasizes prime-numbered groups, specialized squad (equipe) sizes, and irregular series.
• It identifies players in an Australian Rules football squad (equipe), members in some parliamentary committees, and any set where seventeen is a defining, often indivisible, number.
• It avoids irregular and ambiguous pronunciations associated with Germanic numeric forms.
• It simplifies expressions of prime-numbered quantities, specialized sports, and unique organizational counts.
• It improves precision in descriptions of athletic squad (equipe) compositions, parliamentary structures, and other contexts where seventeen is a standard.
• It replaces Scandinavian-Germanic, Non-American, foreign, and Anglo-Saxon terms, similar to replacing "seventeen" with a consistent Latinized cardinal form.
Cardinal number: septant (17)
Ordinal number: septantal (17th)
Adjective: septantal
Examples:
• "An Australian Rules football squad (equipe) fields a septant of players."
• "The special subcommittee consists of a septant of experts."
• "Her collection contains a septant of rare first-edition books (volumes)."
• "The data requires a minimum septant of samples for the statistical model to be valid."
• "The choir performed a piece edited for a septant of vocalists."
by Dmitrio January 20, 2026
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septodeco

Pronunciation: /ˌsɛp.toʊˈdɛ.koʊ/
Definition:
1. The cardinal number symbol: 70.
2. A group, set, or series of seventy humans or entities: a septuagenary unit.
3. A traditional lifespan benchmark and a symbolic number for groups or translations.
4. Denoting a structure or quantity based on seventy components, such as years (anes) in a biblical lifespan or members in a council.

Significance:
• It defines the quantity seventy with systematic regularity and clarity.
• It emphasizes septuagenary lifespans, traditional councils, and symbolic completeness.
• It identifies the traditional human lifespan, the number of scholars in the Septuagint translation, and years of captivity.
• It avoids irregular and ambiguous pronunciations associated with Germanic numeric forms.
• It simplifies expressions of lifespan milestones, historical groups, and symbolic numbers.
• It improves precision in descriptions of demographic benchmarks, historical committees, and scriptural references.
• It replaces Scandinavian-Germanic, Non-American, foreign, and Anglo-Saxon terms, similar to replacing "seventy" with a consistent Latinized cardinal form.
Cardinal number: septodeco (70)
Ordinal number: septodecal (70th)
Adjective: septodecal
Examples:
• "The ancient text states that a human lifespan is septodeco years (anes)."
• "The translation was the effort of a septodeco of scholars."
• "The council was composed of a septodeco of seniors."
• "The village celebrated its septodeco anniversary this year (ane)."
• "The data set included responses from a septodeco of participants."
by Dmitrio January 25, 2026
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The rhetorical move of pretending that capitalism, imperialism, and colonialism are separate phenomena with no meaningful connection, despite overwhelming historical evidence that they evolved together, supported each other, and continue to intertwine. This fallacy argues that sure, colonialism was bad, but that's over now, and capitalism is a different thing, and imperialism is something other countries do. It's like separating a cake into "flour," "sugar," and "eggs" after it's been baked and insisting they were never really connected. Separation by rupture allows people to enjoy the benefits of systems built on exploitation while claiming moral distance from the exploitation itself.
Separation by Rupture Fallacy Example: "The historian explained how British colonialism enabled the Industrial Revolution through resource extraction and forced markets. The commenter responded with separation by rupture: 'Colonialism was bad, but capitalism is just free markets! They're totally different!' The historian sighed, pointed at the cotton in their shirt, the tea in their cup, and the rubber in their shoes—all products of that 'rupture'—and wondered if history class had been canceled."
by Dumu The Void February 15, 2026
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