4 definitions by amlike

1. Matata is a tiny town on the northern island of New Zealand, wich looks like an upside-down half boot, just right under the heel. So probably all the men of this town are henpecked their wives. Indeed, they live directly under the heel. :)
Thus 'to live in matata' for those men is similar to 'to be in marriage and be monogamous'. Do you feel the difference as compared with 'to live in hakuna matata'?

2. From the phrase hakuna matata, which is negating of having problems, you can conclude that 'matata' quite the contrary is something like if you live with big problems and worries, in short, is the same as a pain in the butt.
Thus 'to live in matata' is equal to 'a pain in the butt'.
Maybe so, because they, who 'live in Matata', have earthquakes, mudflows and flooding happens really.

Since that is so (1 and 2), it looks like 'being in marriage/ monogamy' is the same as 'a pain in the butt'. That is interesting findings!
Maybe so, because they, who 'live in marriage', have earthquakes, mudflows and flooding happens too. ;)
Who are live in Matata? Do you like to live in matata always? And what about hakuna matata? Can I live there, in Matata, without troubles: like hakuna matata?
by amlike July 30, 2011
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An ironic term for all formulations, that are implicit reasoning. This is its usual expression:
" If it looks like a duck, swims like a duck, and quacks like a duck, then it probably is a duck. "

It's looks like compliance test of itself through itself.
Did you hear sayng "If it looks like a duck, waddles and quacks, then it's probably a duck"? That's much talked-about duck test.
by amlike July 21, 2011
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1. Suggested but not directly expressed, unspoken or covertly said

2. In mathematics (of a function): an expression in which the dependent variable and the one or more independent variables are not separated on opposite sides of an equation

i.e. relation expressed partly itself through itself
He didn't shout, he didn't threaten, but it was seems on implicit warning by him.
by amlike July 30, 2011
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not fully

The main point:
A half (1/2), a third (1/3), a tenth (1/10), smth without a tenth (9/10), etc. - they are only partly 1 because they are all less than 1, but without them 1 is not form a whole.
What you see in Urbandictionary is only partly true :)
by amlike July 30, 2011
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