A classy name for a drug dealer.
Son: Dad, I think I want to be a narcotic entrepreneur when I grow up.
Dad: Sounds fancy, go for it!
3๐ 1๐
an entrepreneur who builds businesses that generate passive income in order to live freely, expand her mind, and find solutions to help humanity.
Since Jon became a psychedelic entrepreneur, his business is reaching new highs, meanwhile Jon has been volunteering his time to charities all over the world.
3๐ 1๐
Someone who joins a VC firm with the intention of starting a company but who ultimately is unable to commit to a single idea.
Although a successful executive in his last company, as an EIR, John was unable to pull the trigger on a new idea of his own... thus sealing his fate as an entrepreneur in reticence.
5๐ 4๐
The douchebags that steal cats and wheels off cars at night.
Careful leaving your truck out on the road, the midnight entrepreneurs will get to it eventually
One who crafts innovative solutions for the Culture.
Mike is what we like to call a Cultural Entrepreneur, meaning one who crafts innovative solutions for the problems faced by people living within the diaspora.
A fancy way of saying โunemployedโ.
Emily has an anthropoly degree and is working as a social entrepreneur.
3๐ 2๐
1. SLANG: Elegant way of saying someone is a street hustler; someone who makes money selling illegal merchandise (or legal merchandise illegally) on the street or in an urban/ghetto area out of his residence or an illegal place of business (ex. warehouse, back of a grocery store, etc.).
2. PROPER: One who owns a business that caters to the city life, or owns a business located in a city. The term entrepreneur is more correctly reserved for one "seen as a business leader and innovator of new ideas or business processes."
1. Does John have a job, how does he pay for school?
Well he likes to think of himself as an urban entrepreneur, but he just sells weed to kids in the ghetto.
1. SLANG examples: one who: deals drugs, sells stolen electronics off the back of a truck, sells bootleg DVDs, selling items to people stuck in traffic, etc.
2. PROPER examples: street vendors in NYC, owner of a bike courier company, dog walker
12๐ 21๐