a song titled XenoChrist appears on the album Planetary Duality by the Technical death metal band, The Faceless. It is derived from an almagamation of two words, xeno and Christ.
'Xeno' is prefix, derived from a latin word best translated as 'foreigner', or 'stranger.' It is usually used to denote an object that is alien, unusual, or extra-terrestrial.
Christ well, we all know who that is.
The song carries many of the Faceless' staples, such as gutural vocals, complex time signatures, heavily saturated guitar tones and vast amounts of technical profency by all musicians. Perhaps slightly out of character are the soaring keyboard melodies at the end of the song.
'Xeno' is prefix, derived from a latin word best translated as 'foreigner', or 'stranger.' It is usually used to denote an object that is alien, unusual, or extra-terrestrial.
Christ well, we all know who that is.
The song carries many of the Faceless' staples, such as gutural vocals, complex time signatures, heavily saturated guitar tones and vast amounts of technical profency by all musicians. Perhaps slightly out of character are the soaring keyboard melodies at the end of the song.
by zachjal January 11, 2009
Get the xenochrist mug.A term for anyone who has any sort of criticism of xenogenders (quirky "metaphorical" gender identities like catgender or heligender). Someone who thinks xenogenders are absurd, silly, or harmful.
Girl 1: Alex is xenocritical and doesn't think my garlicgender is valid.
Girl 2: He may be trans but he's so transphobic. I don't see why he doesn't use your garlic/garlicself pronouns.
Girl 1: Xenocriticals are bad people.
Girl 2: He may be trans but he's so transphobic. I don't see why he doesn't use your garlic/garlicself pronouns.
Girl 1: Xenocriticals are bad people.
by Qisvon December 16, 2021
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by Chefspam November 9, 2017
Get the Xenocrastiphobia mug.The study of chemical elements, compounds, and reactions under non-terrestrial conditions or as part of hypothetical alien systems. It explores the vast chemical possibilities the universe offers beyond our planet's relatively mild, oxygen-rich environment. This could mean studying how organic molecules form in the methane lakes of Titan, or theorizing about stable compounds that could never exist on Earth but might be common on a high-pressure exoplanet. It's chemistry freed from Earth's parochial conditions.
Example: Researching the complex hydrocarbon chains (tholins) that drizzle from the orange haze of Titan is an act of Xenochemistry. So is calculating the properties of hypothetical sulfuric acid-based solvents or metal alloys that could be stable in the super-hot, high-pressure atmosphere of Venus. It's chemistry for alien environments.
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 3, 2026
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