A character in DominicFears lazer collection similar to spidermans dr octavius. He is often seen firing his laser.
Dr. Octoganopus !!! Blaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaarrgh!!!
by Danny Gerson March 08, 2008
Stands for "too long; didn't read".
Along with the above-mentioned use of tl;dr by lazy jerks and trolls, the use of this term is a great way to cut down long-winded, nonsensical arguments made by insane conspiracy theorists who are probably wearing tin-foil hats while typing them.
Along with the above-mentioned use of tl;dr by lazy jerks and trolls, the use of this term is a great way to cut down long-winded, nonsensical arguments made by insane conspiracy theorists who are probably wearing tin-foil hats while typing them.
Johnny: There's no way the moon landing happened in real life! For one thing, the shadows of Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin in photographs are pointing at different angles. The pictures could only have been taken in a studio! And there aren't any stars in the lunar sky in the pictures, either. How could they have ... (etc.)
Jake: tl;dr
Jake: tl;dr
by Alice Margatroid January 02, 2008
Dr Suess is...
an american man
who writes books with one hand
and can make anything
ryhme with a ting!
an american man
who writes books with one hand
and can make anything
ryhme with a ting!
by geoffrey's hangin out with his wang out November 05, 2006
A much better "chatterbox" than SmarterChild. He was actually able to talk, and yelled at you with a parity error if you cursed at him.
Dr. Sbaitso ownz SmarterChild.
by Phoojoeniam September 09, 2003
Disgusting American soft drink that people only drink because they are too stupid to drink something lacking carbonation. Truly foul.
by Mr Iced Coffee December 21, 2003
by kevin barry April 12, 2006
1. acronym meaning "too long; didn't read". A response to a post that is quite lengthy.
Despite the elitist view that this is used as a way of having to get out of reading "brilliant arguments", sometimes it does make sense. Just because something is long and drawn-out does not mean it is worth reading. I've read "walls of text" that were hollow and nothing but a waste of my time. Lots of talk, little substance. In that case, tl;dr would be more than just a response to laziness.
Despite the elitist view that this is used as a way of having to get out of reading "brilliant arguments", sometimes it does make sense. Just because something is long and drawn-out does not mean it is worth reading. I've read "walls of text" that were hollow and nothing but a waste of my time. Lots of talk, little substance. In that case, tl;dr would be more than just a response to laziness.
"Chapter 1: On the usage of abbreviations in modern internet discourse. Let us begin at the beginning. It all started in 1975 with the advent of the..." *goes on for 300 pages*
"tl;dr"
"tl;dr"
by RoryBrody March 18, 2009