Vaccinated in Name Only. People who decline to take the Covid Vaccine yet find comfort in pretending otherwise.
"So the other day, my regional sales rep, who told all of us in the office that he had been Vaccinated, just got back from Boca... He got Covid."
"Those fucking VINOs"
5👍 3👎
Someone who purports to be a vegan but consumes animal products when no one is looking. e.g. Tammy went to a vegan outreach demonstration downtown and i saw her pull in to the McDonalds drive thru and order a big mac afterwards, shes a real vino; vegan in name only.
A smelly troll that lives under a bridge, a smelly person of cuban heritage, one who does not take showers
Wow you smell like a freaking Vino
32👍 67👎
best kpop tikoker, they outsold charli damelio
"have you heard about vinoful?" "Yes they are the best tikoker ever!"
1👍 1👎
The perfect hump day combination for provocateurs and pranksters. No Wednesday night is complete without the needless, drunken, badgering of one’s adversaries via social media.
Betsy: What are we doing tonight, honey? She’s asks….already knowing the answer
Darren: “It’s Wednesday.” Spoken with a sarcastic tone and a hint of disbelief
Betsy: “and….” Her eye’s roll
Darren: “A little Trolling and Vino”
Besty “Aren’t you getting a little old for this kind of behavior?”
Darren sip. click, click, click, click… #GrotesqueMonsterWife badgering me again. Mean meme forthcoming. #DarrenBesertMemeMachine #BestedByBesert #MonetizeTheMemes
SQUAD GOALS; a group of friends that have been friends for decades and have expanded through the multiple cities and events they have visited
1. AY MAN YOU WANT TO HANG?
- NA MAN, YOU AINT IN THE VINO CLUB.
2. VINO PARTY TONIGHT?
3. WHEN YOU KNOW WHATS UP WITH THE VINO CLUB TODAY?
- NA MAN, YOU AINT A VINO MEMBERS
In vino veritas is a Latin phrase that means "in wine there is truth."
The expression, together with its counterpart in Greek, "Ἐν οἴνῳ ἀλήθεια" (En oinōi alētheia), is found in Erasmus' Adagia, I.vii.17. Pliny the Elder's Naturalis historia contains an early allusion to the phrase. The Greek expression is traced back to a poem by Alcaeus.
Herodotus asserts, and it is likely enough, that if the Persians decided something while drunk, they made a rule to reconsider it when sober. Authors from Herodotus onwards, however, have dared to add that if the Persians made a decision while sober, they made a rule to reconsider it when they were drunk (Histories, book 1, section 133).
The Roman historian Tacitus described how the Germanic peoples always drank while holding councils, as they believed nobody could lie effectively when drunk.
The phrase is often continued as, "In vino veritas, in aqua sanitas", i.e., "In wine there is truth, in water there is health."
The phrase is often continued as, "In vino veritas, in aqua sanitas", i.e., "In wine there is truth, in water there is health."
32👍 3👎