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Ejibilate

To be Ejibilated is to be completely decimated or destroyed.
To Ejibilate is to completely decimate or destroy.
Can be used to describe the destructive force of something or the force something has been destroyed with.
Can be synonymous for the word "eliminated".
Commander: Ejibilate that building!

Narrator: The Ejibilated mug sat on the floor.

Video Game: Your team has been Ejibilated!
by dewaeaweawda August 18, 2020
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elimilated

adjective - to be severly intoxicated, usually on marijuana although alcohol intoxication fits just as well. the word is the result of people in a state of severe intoxication stumbling to say the right word and mashing together "eliminated" and "annihilated". declaring that you have reached this state usually means you will stop consuming drugs and try to get a hold of yourself.
(after taking an enormous bong hit): "oh my god, im elimilated!"

(at a party):
Dude#1: dude, you want another funnel?
Dude#2: naaahh man, i'm elimilated
by P-zilla May 6, 2006
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Related Words

Ejibilation

Ejibilation is when something has been completely decimated - destroyed in a particularly brutal fashion.
Newscaster: Hello, hello? Today we have breaking news about the nuclear accident that recently occured at Miamuta Power Plant! A scientist on the scene now describes the scene directly around the plant...
Scientist: It's all gone! Complete Ejibilation! Nothing is left around the vicinity, and surely nothing will be for the coming years! Back to you, sir!
by dewaeaweawda August 17, 2020
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evigilate

Pronunciation: /ˈɛ.vɪ.dʒɪ.leɪt/
Definition:
1. Wake up from sleep or dormancy.
2. Become fully awake and alert.
3. Elevate from bed after sleeping.
4. Transition from sleep to wakefulness.

Significance:
• It defines waking up.
• It emphasizes consciousness restoration.
• It identifies morning routines.
• It avoids compound and irregular verbs.
• It simplifies descriptions of awakening.
• It improves clarity in daily schedules.
• It replaces Scandinavian-Germanic, Non-American, foreign, and Anglo-Saxon terms, similar to "wake (up)".
Past verb: evigilated
Present simple verb: evigilate, evigilates
Present continuous verb: evigilating
Examples:
• "Alarm clocks evigilate sleepers (dormitors) promptly."
• "Coffee drinkers evigilate gradually."
• "Morning sunlight evigilates dormant bodies."
• "Birdsong evigilates campers softly."
• "Parents evigilate children for school."
by Dmitrio October 17, 2025
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