An unattractive woman.
by Duderancher May 10, 2009
Get the Stega mug.by don't March 28, 2007
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a place where stega based dinosaurs buy assorted items such as clothes, food, justin timberlake cds, toys, house essentials, ect. often time the size of 2 european football feilds. stega-stores disapeared with the dinosaurs do to the dinocaust.
stega-store conversation...
stega 1: what do you think looks better on me? this red sun hat or this white beenie?
stega 2: i like the red...oh crap! ass-teriods!
stega 1: what do you think looks better on me? this red sun hat or this white beenie?
stega 2: i like the red...oh crap! ass-teriods!
by Yanee "Timmy Space Cow Boy" Gonzales December 12, 2008
Get the stega-store mug.by anonymous September 28, 2020
Get the Seegasm mug.a slow internal bleeding that begins, often without a person knowing it, due to a foreign object being lodged in the body (i.e. a shard or small particle from a bullet).
Many of today's handgun bullets tend to break up and disperse inside the shooting victim's body, causing a steady leak, which can be fatal since it's difficult to detect.
by D.S. Credito March 18, 2015
Get the steady leak mug.Act passed in 1933 which regulated banking. Named for Sen. Carter Glass (D-VA) and Rep. Henry Steagall (D-AL 3rd). Also known as the Banking Act of 1933. Motivated by the Great Depression and one of the pillars of the New Deal.
Glass-Steagall prohibited commercial banks from engaging in underwriting securities, i.e., banks that accepted deposits and loaned money at interest were not allowed to issue bonds or new public offerings of stocks. The Act also authorized the creation of deposit insurance.
The Banking Act of '33 was strengthened in 1956 when bank holding companies were barred from the insurance business.
Between 1982 and 1999, banks were deregulated until the same corporation could take deposits, create credit, borrow from the Federal Reserve, underwrite stocks and bonds, operate a hedge fund, and sell insurance.
Glass-Steagall prohibited commercial banks from engaging in underwriting securities, i.e., banks that accepted deposits and loaned money at interest were not allowed to issue bonds or new public offerings of stocks. The Act also authorized the creation of deposit insurance.
The Banking Act of '33 was strengthened in 1956 when bank holding companies were barred from the insurance business.
Between 1982 and 1999, banks were deregulated until the same corporation could take deposits, create credit, borrow from the Federal Reserve, underwrite stocks and bonds, operate a hedge fund, and sell insurance.
Glass-Steagall was repealed in stages between 1982 and 1999.
In 1990, the largest bank in the USA--CitiBank--held assets of $369.1 (2009 dollars); by 2009, it held over 5x that. Bank of America is now 13.24 times its size in 1990. The repeal of Glass-Steagall undeniably worsened our problem with banks that were too big to fail.
In 1990, the largest bank in the USA--CitiBank--held assets of $369.1 (2009 dollars); by 2009, it held over 5x that. Bank of America is now 13.24 times its size in 1990. The repeal of Glass-Steagall undeniably worsened our problem with banks that were too big to fail.
by Abu Yahya April 5, 2010
Get the Glass-Steagall mug.An expression of disgust and exclaimation at the same time, usually associated when seeing someone eating da poo poo
by Sir Missy Inniss October 31, 2011
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