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Iduna is a playful girl who is shy and sweet. Her trust is hard to acquire but when you have earned it she is unwavering in trust, loyalty, and love. She is very beautiful and brave. And if she trust you, she can get very sexy and hot. Be carful not to betray her trust because she does not give second chances. Hold her closely and dearly.
Boy: “Iduna is so pretty!”
Girl:” I wish I had Iduna’s charachter!”
iduna by RICKTHESTIK February 13, 2021
Related Words

Ideonatomy 

A unique personal anatomical quirk, disfunction or oddity. One's awareness of how our own body differs from the norm.
(Theoretical example: having more than one functional penis - with all the complications that could arise)
Must be physical/biological, not psychological.
(From above) "Due to the nature of my ideonatomy, I can urinate in two different directions at the same time."
Taken from "ideo" (ie: ideosyncratic) prefix and spliced with anatomy, dropping the initial "a" to make the contraction.
Ideonatomy by v1ct0rth3cl34n3r June 19, 2015
Jo: How come you're never outside anymore?
Bill: I've been banned from leaving because they think I'm buying junk food.
Jo: Your parents, man, ideua.
ideua by stoveintheflat October 4, 2013

Ideonation

A nation whose identity, borders, and self‑understanding are constructed around a core ideology rather than primarily around ethnicity, language, or geography. An ideonation defines itself by adherence to a set of beliefs (liberal democracy, communism, theocracy, etc.), and citizenship is often tied to ideological loyalty. Examples include the United States (American creedal nationalism), the former USSR (Soviet man), or revolutionary France (liberté, égalité, fraternité). Ideonations are especially prone to ideological purity tests and conflicts over what “true” membership requires. They also face crises when the founding ideology loses legitimacy, leaving an identity vacuum.
Example: “The United States is often described as an ideonation—you don’t need to share an ethnicity, only a belief in ‘life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.’ In practice, that belief has been fiercely contested.”

Ideogovernment

A government that explicitly and systematically organizes its policies, institutions, and legitimation around a single ideology—where governance is not pragmatism but ideological implementation. In an ideogovernment, policy debates are not about what works but about what is ideologically correct. The government’s primary function is to realize the ideology (e.g., building socialism, enforcing religious law, advancing neoliberal marketization). Ideogovernments often produce rigid orthodoxy, purge dissenters, and prioritize ideological purity over adaptability. However, they can also generate intense loyalty and clear direction. The term is used critically to highlight when governance has become subservient to dogma rather than responsive to human needs.

Example: “The new administration wasn’t just conservative; it was an ideogovernment, replacing career officials with ideologues and measuring every policy by its alignment with a 50‑page manifesto.”
Ideonation by Abzugal April 16, 2026

Ideonature

The conceptualization of “nature” as filtered through a specific ideology—where what is considered natural, unnatural, or against nature is not a neutral observation but a political and cultural construct. Ideonature explains why different societies have different ideas about which behaviors are “natural” (e.g., hierarchy, cooperation, competition, monogamy) and why these naturalizations are used to justify social arrangements. The concept is central to feminist critiques of biological determinism, postcolonial critiques of primitivism, and environmental debates about “pristine” wilderness. Recognizing ideonature reveals that appeals to “nature” are often appeals to power disguised as inevitability.
Example: “Victorian ideonature held that women’s ‘natural’ place was the home, supported by selective readings of biology. Modern ideonature often claims that competition is ‘natural’ to capitalism—again, ideology dressed as fact.”

Ideonatural

An adjective describing claims, policies, or beliefs that present a socially constructed or ideologically driven view of nature as if it were simply factual, inevitable, or divinely ordained. An ideonatural statement takes the form “it’s only natural that…” followed by a proposition that actually serves specific interests (e.g., “it’s only natural that men lead,” “it’s only natural that the strong prevail”). The ideonatural functions as a rhetorical trump card: once something is labeled “natural,” it becomes very difficult to argue against without seeming to oppose reality itself. Critical analysis unpacks the ideology behind the naturalization.

Example: “His argument that hierarchy is ‘just human nature’ was ideonatural—it universalized a particular social arrangement under capitalism as if it were a law of biology.”
Ideonature by Abzugal April 16, 2026

Signal iduna park 

Borussia Dortmund's home ground with one of the best atmospheres you can find in Europe. Worth a visit by a neutral fan as they also play exciting games.
Did you go to the Signal Iduna Park yesterday?

Yeah Dortmund beat Augsburg 4-3 and we even saw 3 goals in 3 minutes