Multiple interpretations and uses of a legal term.
Used in conversation to provide information about an event or situation without revealing or compromising personal and sensitive details about the actual event or situation.
Also used more when an individual or group Interferes with predetermined plans to purposefully prevent a specific outcome.
Also used to indicate the opposite of factual events or details.
Also know as a similie in proper grammatical terms.
John drove around town all weekend running errands but filibustered to his work friends that he flew around the world.
John didn’t want to tell his boss that he overslept so he filibustered that he had a plumbing leak.
(Verb) To cum into someone's mouth while wearing a powered wig.
How politicians justify there existence
“The bill will never pass, we’ll filibuster it”