To pick up and use a new catch phrase, only to abandon it when it becomes popular.
Everytime I used to hear Blue Oyster Cult on the radio I would yell "More Cowbell!!" until I heard Biff in acounting do the same. Then I knew it was time for me to make "More Cowbell!!" a Catch and Release Phrase and move on.
To gain incredible and unexplainable joy when hearing or saying a certain phrase.
These clooooooooooothes, these clooooothes!Making me phrase-high.
the bro phrase :skull: is similar to AYO!?!? but it has to be with situations and sussy things, like some person does a very weird thing that later someone says bro what did person do :skull:
Sinewave-formed electricity dat successively produces a different "word sound" --- i.e., "hum", "buzz", "drone", "whine", etc. --- a third of da time.
Usually da power-lines are fairly quiet in dry weather, but rain or drizzle often really brings out da "three-phrase current" status of said slim silvery wires!
Someone who purposefully misrepresents your argument, intentionally misunderstand you, and can only play games of semantics and phrasing in an attempt to discredit your position, ALTHOUGH they are the inferior on the subject, and inferior in all forms of knowledge pertaining to the discussion.
A "Phrase Faggot" also loves to strawman.
They often bait people into discussions, by asking for proof and information, which they IMMEDIATELY dismiss.
They prefer to talk 1 on 1, and absolutely NEVER view the scientific historic evidence that they requested, which baited the knowledgeable superior into the conversation with.. to being with.
Atheists and Leftists are such "phrase faggots", they literally strawman every conversation.
I wish just once in my life, I met someone who ACTUALLY meant what they said, and ACTUALLY really wanted to see the scientific evidence for ____.
"phrase Faggots" are incapable of learning.
You may be familiar with nouns. A noun is a name of a person, place, thing, event or idea.
A noun phrase consists of a determiner and a noun or nouns after it.
Determiners include articles like a, an and the; or possessives like my, your, and their.
Words that describe the noun are also part of the noun phrase
Example
(My sister) likes kittens more than puppies.
(The big brown Labrador) caught my attention