Sinjhun or Slim Jim is an absolute dog and freak in the sheets. The Name originates in the western cape of South Africa and is often a name given to newborns with exceptionally large penises. A natural leader and considered royalty in the Republic of South Africa.
Example 1 :
Girl: Hey look there’s Sinjhun
Girl 2: Hey Sinjhun!
Sinjhun: *starts roaring and humphing trash can aggressively*
Example 2
Girl: I HEARD THAT GUY HAS A GOOD PACKAGE
GIRL 2: Yes, he has an absolute Sinjhun between his legs
Girl: Hey look there’s Sinjhun
Girl 2: Hey Sinjhun!
Sinjhun: *starts roaring and humphing trash can aggressively*
Example 2
Girl: I HEARD THAT GUY HAS A GOOD PACKAGE
GIRL 2: Yes, he has an absolute Sinjhun between his legs
by Baltothebitchslayer September 3, 2024
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sinjn
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Prison or a place of confinement especially for lawbreakers. specifically : an institution (such as one under state jurisdiction) for confinement of persons convicted of serious crimes compare jail.
by MR. Bartholomeow February 1, 2025
Get the Sinner's Cabinet mug.A person who frequently commits sins or acts in a way that is considered unconventional, specifically someone whose name starts with the letter K.
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by laylowsinner March 7, 2026
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Charlie- "I'm supposed to be studying, but I'm watching sinners (2025). I'm being such a sinnerstudantian"
Charlie- "I'm supposed to be studying, but I'm watching sinners (2025). I'm being such a sinnerstudantian"
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/sɪnˈænɪməs/
adjective
1. Lacking the essential spirit or vital force of life; profoundly hollow.
2. Characterized by a state of being ‘without soul’; specifically referring to a person or object that remains physically present but is spiritually or emotionally vacant.
Etymology
From the Latin sine (“without”) + animus (“soul, mind, breath of life”). Unlike inanimate (which describes objects that have never possessed life), sinanimous implies a state of deprivation or the active absence of a spirit that ought to be there.
Usage Note
While inanimate is a clinical or scientific term for non-living matter (e.g., rocks, water), sinanimous is a literary or philosophical term used to describe a haunting or unnatural lack of vitality in things that typically possess it (e.g., a crowd, a home, or a human gaze).
/sɪnˈænɪməs/
adjective
1. Lacking the essential spirit or vital force of life; profoundly hollow.
2. Characterized by a state of being ‘without soul’; specifically referring to a person or object that remains physically present but is spiritually or emotionally vacant.
Etymology
From the Latin sine (“without”) + animus (“soul, mind, breath of life”). Unlike inanimate (which describes objects that have never possessed life), sinanimous implies a state of deprivation or the active absence of a spirit that ought to be there.
Usage Note
While inanimate is a clinical or scientific term for non-living matter (e.g., rocks, water), sinanimous is a literary or philosophical term used to describe a haunting or unnatural lack of vitality in things that typically possess it (e.g., a crowd, a home, or a human gaze).
by AcroXP March 20, 2026
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