the SUPERIOR account on stan twitter. her fame overthrows us all and she is THE mama d. no better definition. she is best known for having friends such as gabby, lulu, mya, grace, jessica, arielle, etc. she is best known for being the crackhead of stan twitter. people on omegle commonly say “stan mama d”. she once yelled daniel seavey have my kids. stan seaveyscircle
“did you hear about mama d?”
“yeah she’s superior”
“and a crackhead”
“what’s her name?”
“mama d?”
“no deanna?”
“yeah she’s superior”
“and a crackhead”
“what’s her name?”
“mama d?”
“no deanna?”
by daniellover3210 October 15, 2019

A writer of Hymns
by Lespaul1001 May 17, 2022

A state in which ones relationship with another can grow and they can become closer, usually physically closer. This may eventually lead up to them dating in the future.
by Deleted_Usr September 13, 2022

using the contraction ‘d when responding to a person in an argument to say they have a small head on their private parts which would make them not above average for their gender in terms of accomplishment.
by Coop Dupe June 11, 2018

by Dr.D Fraud May 13, 2019

Definition:
To be Franced is to be suddenly and spectacularly let down in a way that feels both avoidable and completely out of your control. It usually happens after someone confidently says “don’t worry, I’ve got it” — only for you to find out they absolutely didn’t.
Background:
The term “Franced” was born in chaotic workplaces and group projects, where someone’s lack of follow-through becomes your emergency. It captures that specific kind of betrayal that’s not evil — just incredibly frustrating, often involving vague promises, missing details, and last-minute disasters.
To be Franced is to be suddenly and spectacularly let down in a way that feels both avoidable and completely out of your control. It usually happens after someone confidently says “don’t worry, I’ve got it” — only for you to find out they absolutely didn’t.
Background:
The term “Franced” was born in chaotic workplaces and group projects, where someone’s lack of follow-through becomes your emergency. It captures that specific kind of betrayal that’s not evil — just incredibly frustrating, often involving vague promises, missing details, and last-minute disasters.
“I thought the venue was booked. Nope — totally Franced (Fr-ance-d) ”
“We were ready to present, but the files were missing. Got Franced (Fr-ance-d) hard.”
“She said she sent the email… turns out it was in her drafts. We’ve all been there — classic Francing.”
“We were ready to present, but the files were missing. Got Franced (Fr-ance-d) hard.”
“She said she sent the email… turns out it was in her drafts. We’ve all been there — classic Francing.”
by Creator of Workplace Humour May 15, 2025
