noun
oh·rina \ˌo-
ree-naa\ the faculty or phenomenon of finding things initially anticipated to be agreeable to contain an element of surprise in contrast with
one's initial excitement.
etymology of ohrina
The exact origins of the phrase “ohrina” are not know with absolute certainty. However, it is understood that in the early part of the second decade of the second millennia (in accordance with the Gregorian calendar) a young betty named Rina returned to the United States of America having
spent several years in East
Asia. She would tell tales of teaching English as a second language, but her exact whereabouts and activities have been long subject to
intellectual discourse. Once settled in the north western region of the village of Brooklyn (see "Breuckelen"), “Our Rina” would bring hand gestures and click consonants wherever she travelled. What is known with some certainty is that she was twice early for a date and once claimed to accidentally insist that a
man with years of dedicated vegetarianism consume what was once a beautiful living thing, probably called
Daisy.
1. When
one agrees to play another at a game of scrabble thinking that
one has the chance to not completely humiliate oneself only to find that
one has one’s ass served to him, he may think to himself or even exclaim in vain “ohrina.”