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Chillish-Billuanian Commonwealth

The nation in Eastern Europe that was super skibidi fanum tax ohio rizzler and the Skeleboner.
1293-1678.
W Adult Monkey Union Suit, Chillish-Billuanian Commonwealth.

Me: Ok!
by Chillmarian October 15, 2023
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half not in common

When you partially match with someone on a topic.
I love playing pool in suburban dive bars but my date just likes the bar so we had that half not in common.
by oldsheepie December 18, 2023
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773rd most common password

According to Wikipedia, the 773rd most common password used is the n-word with a hard r
That white boy called me the 773rd most common password !
by Alegyatrix December 20, 2023
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wait what is going on here im a little out of sorts
hey do u fw the chattering lack of common sense by ghost and pals
hell yeah brutha
by entomothku July 31, 2024
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The shared, tacit assumptions that enable communication and cooperation within a group, maintained by collective confirmation. When everyone in a community starts from the same axioms and continually reinforces them through discourse, the axioms become "common ground"—so obvious they need not be stated. This bias is functional: it reduces negotiation costs and enables coordinated action. It is also a prison: it makes the group's foundational premises invisible and unassailable from within.
Confirmation Bias of Common Ground Example: In a corporate meeting, everyone confirms that "shareholder value" is the ultimate goal. This common ground is never debated; it's the platform upon which all other debates happen. An outsider asking "Why maximize shareholder value?" is met with confused silence—they've violated the Confirmation Bias of Common Ground. The group's bias is so deeply shared they've forgotten it's a bias.
by Dumu The Void February 11, 2026
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The process by which certain beliefs become elevated to the status of "common sense" precisely because they have been confirmed so often, by so many, for so long, that their confirmation is no longer visible as an active process. Common sense feels like direct perception of reality, not a hypothesis, because its confirmation history is buried in cultural memory. This bias hides the contingency of these beliefs, making alternatives seem not just wrong, but insane. Common sense is the ghost of confirmation bias after it has become invisible.
Confirmation Bias of Common Sense Example: In 1700, it was common sense that the Earth was young and that kings ruled by divine right. These weren't beliefs; they were the backdrop of reality. Questioning them was folly. Today, common sense includes human rights and germ theory. Confirmation Bias of Common Sense reveals that yesterday's common sense was just a massively confirmed hypothesis, and today's will be tomorrow's historical curiosity. The bias is in forgetting that all sense was once nonsense.
by Dumu The Void February 11, 2026
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