A beautiful girl, who's amazing to be around, she's probably pretty popular, a cheerleader, and dates your old crush,
But she's an amazing friend and will always be there if you need her
But she's an amazing friend and will always be there if you need her
by Fishyfish mc fisher March 7, 2020
Get the Quania mug.Quania is a beautiful young brownskin girl who is quiet. Her trust is hard to gain once lost and is hard to get. Shes caring and kind and will understand you. Once she loves you she wont stop loving you even on bad terms.
by Niyanna🧿💕 November 23, 2021
Get the Quania mug.Related Words
Quania
• Quandale Dingle
• Quandale
• Qaania
• Quanda
• quandary
• Quaning
• quanta
• Quantanami
• Quantaum
Very intelligent, big heart, loves to help others and give advice, sexy, unpredictable, great in bed, loves long, hates longer, makes sure everyone is happy before herself, loves compliments but will never believe them, always wants to try new things, can be really crazy, loves to play around, tends to like playing hard, believes in love and fixing things, very gorgeous and outgoing, never gives up on anyone, and wants the best out of others, even ones she hates, people tend to judge her, but she could care less, doesn't feed off others lies, very fun to be around, makes memories, lives like there's no tomorrow, nice body and great booty, she tends to make you laugh or cry more than frown and upset, always thinks positive, and wants to be loved by ones she loves, tends to be put down a lot, has or had rough past but she never let's that get to her, she is probably the greatest girl you'll ever meet, huge role model and will get far.
by Namesrus6546 August 31, 2013
Get the Quanita mug.A Quandale Dingle is an advanced technique employed at the high school level of football in which a player of below average height but above average weight for a given position is given the football usually as part of a larger trick play. It is often employed in desperate game situations where the chances of winning are slim. The move was named after one of the greatest high school offensive guards of all time, Quandale Dingle, but its use in game scenarios is highly controversial as its overall effectiveness depends almost entirely on the motivation of the player with the ball. It has also lead to some high-profile career ending injuries, which is why its use has not been adopted at the college or NFL levels.
Football Player 1: (Looks to the sidelines) Oh no.
Football Player 2: What's wrong? What's the play call?
Football Player 1: Coach is calling for a Quandale Dingle.
Football Player 2: God be with us.
Football Player 2: What's wrong? What's the play call?
Football Player 1: Coach is calling for a Quandale Dingle.
Football Player 2: God be with us.
by Doroille Longfellow March 22, 2022
Get the Quandale Dingle mug.by quandale dingleberry March 2, 2022
Get the quandale dingle mug.1. Recognizable qualitative characters of the given.--C. I. Lewis (1929)
2. Parts of experiential knowledge, i.e., that which can only be known through experience.
3. The introspectively accessible, phenomenal aspects of our mental lives.--Stanford Internet Encyclopaedia of Philosophy
4. Simplest forms of experience.
5. Outlets of the flow of experience (from consciousness).
6. Finest levels of (mental) qualities.
7. Finest levels of feeling.
8. Junction points between being and experiencing.
9. Starting points of becoming.
10. Introspectible and seemingly monadic properties of sense datum, but universal, not particular.
11. 'Quale' is to 'quality' as 'quantum' is to 'quantity'. (Etymologically)
12. Subjective qualities of conscious experience.
13. Subjective sensations. --Ramachandran & Blakeslee (1998)
14. Orderly modes of consciousness.
2. Parts of experiential knowledge, i.e., that which can only be known through experience.
3. The introspectively accessible, phenomenal aspects of our mental lives.--Stanford Internet Encyclopaedia of Philosophy
4. Simplest forms of experience.
5. Outlets of the flow of experience (from consciousness).
6. Finest levels of (mental) qualities.
7. Finest levels of feeling.
8. Junction points between being and experiencing.
9. Starting points of becoming.
10. Introspectible and seemingly monadic properties of sense datum, but universal, not particular.
11. 'Quale' is to 'quality' as 'quantum' is to 'quantity'. (Etymologically)
12. Subjective qualities of conscious experience.
13. Subjective sensations. --Ramachandran & Blakeslee (1998)
14. Orderly modes of consciousness.
1. Philosophers and scientists alike have pondered qualia for a long time without resolution.
2. AI researchers wonder whether machines that pass the Turing Test would experience qualia, and whether they would even need to do so.
3. It is difficult to deny the existence of qualia.
4. Our failure to define qualia also makes people wonder if color are experienced differently by each person--how can we tell if some people see colors inverted, since they would still call roses red and grass green?
5. Qualia could occur only in the presence, interfacing the future and the past. You can remember the information about events, but not the actual feeling you had at that time. You could remember, for example, having been angry at receiving a parking ticket--but this is information not actually the feeling, since the police officer also remembers you being angry. If the memory makes you angry, then your present anger is a new experience--not the original experience. But this is good; otherwise, we could recall qualia such as pain--and headaches might never end.
2. AI researchers wonder whether machines that pass the Turing Test would experience qualia, and whether they would even need to do so.
3. It is difficult to deny the existence of qualia.
4. Our failure to define qualia also makes people wonder if color are experienced differently by each person--how can we tell if some people see colors inverted, since they would still call roses red and grass green?
5. Qualia could occur only in the presence, interfacing the future and the past. You can remember the information about events, but not the actual feeling you had at that time. You could remember, for example, having been angry at receiving a parking ticket--but this is information not actually the feeling, since the police officer also remembers you being angry. If the memory makes you angry, then your present anger is a new experience--not the original experience. But this is good; otherwise, we could recall qualia such as pain--and headaches might never end.
by hyperlinguist December 17, 2006
Get the qualia mug.