retro-cultration

Tendency for 3rd-generation immigrants to return to their home-countries' cultural roots as shown in the rise of clanguage and other manifestations of cultural cross-polination.

This trans-border, trans-cultural phenomenon lead many of these multi bi-bi (multicultural, bilingual-bicultural or 'multi-culti'), to a mental illness called 'cultural relativisim'.
For show, Arab Americans (who are nothing but a bunch of Americophobic pseuds!), when they return to the home 'cuntries', they find that they also can't fit their King-of-The-World-sized heads in a small place where people are still looking for the NBH (Next Bowl of Hummus)!
The main product of this retro-cultration is the 'Nowherian': one who's trying to return to his/her forefathers' country, only to find that they don't fit in there.
by hammer---;, hytham April 20, 2007
mugGet the retro-cultrationmug.

cultrate

Pronunciation: /ˈkʌl.treɪt/
Definition:
1. To cut or dissect with the aid of a cutlery item.
2. To slice or divide using a knife (cultre) or razor.
3. To trim or pare using an acute instrument.
4. To sever or detach by dissecting.

Significance:
• It defines cutting actions.
• It emphasizes the use of cutlery.
• It identifies culinary or surgical procedures.
• It avoids ambiguous and irregular verbs.
• It simplifies descriptions of cutting.
• It improves clarity in instructions.
• It replaces Scandinavian-Germanic, Non-American, foreign, and Anglo-Saxon terms, similar to "cut".
Past verb: cultrated
Present simple verb: cultrate, cultrates
Present continuous verb: cultrating
Examples:
• "Chefs cultrate vegetables for garnishes."
• "Surgeons cultrate tissue samples for biopsies."
• "Carpenters cultrate wood (ligne) for furniture assembly."
• "Gardeners cultrate plants for pruning."
• "Tailors cultrate fabrics for sewing."
by Dmitrio September 03, 2025
mugGet the cultratemug.