Someone regardless of actual gender who misappropriates the term "reply guy" to otherwise respectful social media comments and unjustly makes someone out to be a douche-nozzle when they were really just partaking in a discussion prompted by the "Reply Gal". Reply Gals are hypocritical in the fact that they blame others for replying to a comment and instead of blocking a person they don't want to converse with make it a point to ridicule them through a reply of their own and applying other made up mockeries such as calling them "sea-lions" or "JAQass", using a response of genuine confusion as justification to further their cyber-bullying and take out misplaced anger on some innocent netizen instead of actual douche-nozzles.
I'm sorry if you're upset, but my friend's comment was not a personal attack, just a political question based on your political post so why are you being such a Reply Gal towards him?
The Jean Piaget Effect, also known as the Piaget Effect or the Lore Master Effect, is a psychological effect found in the school of thought known as Constructivism in which the style of speech in an environment has an effect on changing the speech patterns of the individual. This is an off-shoot of Piaget's definition of "accommodation". The process of accommodation involves altering one's existing schemas, or ideas, as a result of new information or new experiences . In this case, the effect is mostly subconscious and expressed through literacy.
After attending some college courses, the Piaget Effect was causing Vinnford to structure his conversations like they were essays and the only way to turn it off was to watch Trailer Park Boys.
A type of book, usually fiction or semi-fictional, that bleeds many genres together, making it difficult to define.
"The Vaults of Lore books are written from the autobiographical standpoint of a space alien from a fantasy world, but set in Earth's real history with guest star appearances from famous figures mixed with a lot of conspiracy and religious themes: a real genre-buster!"
A lite version of code-switching that takes place within the same language, but changes the tone of one's inner dialogue or speaking or writing style to temporarily correlate with environmental factors such as the voice of narration in a book, watching television shows in a slightly different dialect, or being in a different setting which changes the grade level of word choice such as attending college or joining the Marines. Coined by Vinnford Sansbury in the book Vaults of Lore - Agicalia Volume One: Magic's End
I can't stop cussing ever since I got out of the military because of this fucking Lore Master Effect!