A person who frequently commits sins or acts in a way that is considered unconventional, specifically someone whose name starts with the letter K.
sinner k
by laylowsinner March 7, 2026
Get the sinner k mug.Singlelessness, pronounced "Single-less-ness" or sometimes, Singlessness,
(1) originally a misspelling, or miss-read of Signlessness, one of the three doors of liberation in Mahayana Buddhism - Emptiness, Signlessness and Aimlessness - has "remanifested" as a word that means the inability to exist as a separated, single entity of any entity in the whole universe. Another way to state the interconnected nature of all things.
(2) A comforting way to use deep, reliable buddhist philosophy to tell your friend who is still single that even without a partner he/she is not truly ever single. That he/she is deeply connected to everyone else and there are always friends, loved ones that care about you. (Can absolutely be used for sarcasm)
(1) originally a misspelling, or miss-read of Signlessness, one of the three doors of liberation in Mahayana Buddhism - Emptiness, Signlessness and Aimlessness - has "remanifested" as a word that means the inability to exist as a separated, single entity of any entity in the whole universe. Another way to state the interconnected nature of all things.
(2) A comforting way to use deep, reliable buddhist philosophy to tell your friend who is still single that even without a partner he/she is not truly ever single. That he/she is deeply connected to everyone else and there are always friends, loved ones that care about you. (Can absolutely be used for sarcasm)
(1) The singlelessness nature of all things; You stop feeling lonely when you are reminded of the truth of singlelessness.
(2) Dude, cheer up! You are not single. In fact, because of singlelessness, you cannot really be single!
(2) Dude, cheer up! You are not single. In fact, because of singlelessness, you cannot really be single!
by TrueSF March 9, 2026
Get the singlelessness mug.One of the crew who cannot be tamed. As such, he marches to the beat of his own drum. Some might call him a “wild child”. Others might say “renegade”. While not anti-social, sometimes he just needs to hit T-peps for a post-rid brewski all by himself, or head to “Newport” for a soccer game or to pick out a Christmas tree. In August.
To support this lifestyle, he just needs a German sedan and a single bike rack. No passengers!
To support this lifestyle, he just needs a German sedan and a single bike rack. No passengers!
That Single-Rack BLOKE (SRB) beat a hasty retreat to T-peps once he realized everyone else in the gang was on dry January. Good thing he has that single rack and can drive by himself.
by Shivbo the Clown March 10, 2026
Get the Single-Rack BLOKE (SRB) mug.Mei- "What are you up so late in the lounge?"
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"
by obdylan_xox March 16, 2026
Get the Sinnerstudantian mug.sin·an·i·mous
/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
Get the Sinanimus mug.by EasternEuropeanSlavLover July 22, 2025
Get the singapore mug.The opposite of flotation.
by Imageagent July 24, 2025
Get the sinktation mug.