Words, opinions, or statements that can be said without fear of being scrutinized for things that have happened in the past.
by ThatGuy9994 May 12, 2020

An American brand of skin cream that started out as a remedy for diaper rash.12 It has also been used for the treatment of various skin ailments including psoriasis, jock itch, shingles, chafing, cold sores and acne
In 2008, due to Boudreaux's Butt Paste ads on the car, Ray's No. 90 Ford was named the fifth scariest NASCAR paint scheme of all time by ESPN The Magazine for having "'BUTT PASTE' slapped on the rear quarter panels in giant red lettering and a cartoon baby riding on the hood
by SPrice1980 April 27, 2023

by KaceyMeRolling June 5, 2021

In cheating communities, a paste is a cheat that is completely copy-pasted (or, more modernly, downloaded straight from GitHub) from the source of another cheat.
This pairs with a 'rename', which is just a paste but renamed throughout the code.
Skids (script kiddies) usually do this to try to look cool.
This pairs with a 'rename', which is just a paste but renamed throughout the code.
Skids (script kiddies) usually do this to try to look cool.
Skid: "hey look at the cheat i just spent 4 hours making"
Guy: "that's a fucking onetap paste, stfu"
Guy: "that's a fucking onetap paste, stfu"
by actual hvher January 18, 2025

by OG_Savage23 July 27, 2023

A condition, in which someone accidentally mixes past-life memories from separate past-lives into a memory from one past-life.
'Like many reincarnated people, I think that I had a bad case of merged past-life memories syndrome (MPLMS): I was confused that my past-life memories from my past-life as a muse were from my past-life as a mermaid, until I figured that these memories were from separate past-lives.'
by DianaLuciusDeCollis September 10, 2022

Used when talking about a historic person or event. It should never be used when referring to present people or events. Written by Tony John Williams.
"He likes this song" explained Dahlia.
"No, Dahlia, he liked this song. "Liked" being the operative word. Always speak in past tense when referring to a past person or event." said Martin.
"No, Dahlia, he liked this song. "Liked" being the operative word. Always speak in past tense when referring to a past person or event." said Martin.
by NutCracker288 October 7, 2020
