A distro and member of the edonkey community. Well know on ShareReactor for being involved in flame wars.
by Mr Nice December 16, 2003
Get the Hakzoid mug.by SignedJorge June 19, 2017
Get the Hakala mug.a. Answering everything in an overly condescending, aggressive and sarcastic manner
b. Seeing even the most basic of problems as a 'cataclysmic' world ending event
c. The inability to not control your sarcastic nature
b. Seeing even the most basic of problems as a 'cataclysmic' world ending event
c. The inability to not control your sarcastic nature
I told John he had to stay 30 minutes late in order to finish up his project that is due and he started 'pulling a Hakula'. I thought he was going to snap.
example conversation:
Bill: Mike, I was wondering if this was the right form to use?
Mike: Why don't you make up your own form and start from scratch, what we have been doing for years!
example conversation:
Bill: Mike, I was wondering if this was the right form to use?
Mike: Why don't you make up your own form and start from scratch, what we have been doing for years!
by Softscrubb May 1, 2011
Get the Pulling a Hakula mug.by Inuyasharocks January 15, 2005
Get the yu yu hakusho mug.I will HAKAI you
by THE CHAIR OF THE KAIJU October 3, 2018
Get the HAKAI mug.when the coach said to the basketball players "take careful aim" the cheerleaders shouted out hakel!
by caroline March 29, 2003
Get the hakel mug.One of the most common languages alongside Cantonese and Min in South China, Hong Kong, and Macau. Hakka is also a somewhat common language that is spoken by the Chinese community in Taiwan, Vietnam, Malaysia, and Indonesia. Being an off-spring with Sze Yap and Gan languages of the Chu state at which it was originated from the Yangtze River of South China, Hakka is a Miao-Yao language that was spoken by the Chu natives in its archaic form. Later, Hakka evolved to borrow a small percent of Han (Mandarin) words, Cantonese words, and Min words, as well as being written in Chinese characters alongside Mandarin, Cantonese, Min, and Wu for speakers to socialize with each other more effectively. Regardless, Hakka is a distinctive Asian language from other languages in China and most people outside of China (except for Chinese nationalists) consider Miao-Yao not placed under the Sino-Tibetan family tree.
In the 20th century, Hakka might have been suppressed by Chinese nationalists of the Kuomintang (ROC) government out of favoritism for only Mandarin with a Beijing accent to thrive in Taiwan. Blessed with charm that the Kuomintang (ROC) was declining in its power in the late 1980s, the DPP is trying to promote equality for Taiwanese people to speak Hakka alongside Min, Mandarin, and the Taiwanese aborigines languages whatever they wish. The progressive party, especially the current Hakka president of Taiwan, rocks!
by TheUnknown21 February 16, 2020
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