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Blog Wars

1. Blog postings that subtly and passive aggressively take a shot at someone else, based on their blog postings. Blog. Repeat.

2. A war of words. No actual combat will ever take place, aka no actual verbal confrontation in the physical world will ever happen.

Lucy blogs about something she reads on a frenemy's blog. The frenemy reads her blog posting and retaliates by posting her own blog entry that subtly and indirectly takes a cheap shot at Lucy's blog. The blog wars start. This continues until one of them finds it boring and stops, though this may never happen.

by Wine Chick July 15, 2009

7πŸ‘ 1πŸ‘Ž


war dump

The act of emptying your bowels before battle or a strenuous activity.

Tom: β€œbro I’m cramping up before every game do you know what the deal is”
John: β€œjust go take a war dump, your body wants to be ready”

by Glocks2Cocks July 21, 2019

7πŸ‘ 1πŸ‘Ž


war paint

facial cosmetics, facial makeup(from the facial paint that was sometimes worn by Native Americans)

She forgot to put on her war paint again.

by The Return of Light Joker October 23, 2007

24πŸ‘ 8πŸ‘Ž


war on terrorism

A term used to describe any wars that America conducts in the middle east for Israel's sake.

The "war on terrorism" is nothing more than America being a servile dog to Zionist interests in the middle east.

by Amrcn Ptriot August 6, 2009

24πŸ‘ 8πŸ‘Ž


War Paint

Noun. Make-up, Facial cosmetics

"I have to put on my war paint before I go off to school."

by Nathalie Marcom December 23, 2005

49πŸ‘ 20πŸ‘Ž


war and peace

A very long, but very good novel by the russian writer Tolstoy. I finished this novel some days ago and would only recomend it to those who have plenty of good reading time on their hands. This novel was one of the best most detailed I have ever read.

the novel covers the invasion of Nepolian of russia and much more.

by yankee May 18, 2005

53πŸ‘ 22πŸ‘Ž


war chalking

The practice of leaving coded chalk marks on or near buildings or sites where a "war driver" has identified available 802.11 wireless network access. The marks usually indicate the type of access and level of security.

This practice is decended from the way hobos used to chalk mark the curbs outside homes where an easy mark could be approached for food or other handouts.

I located a particularly handy open wifi network near the ballpark, so I warchalked it for my hacker brothers and sisters.

by SYFer August 9, 2003

17πŸ‘ 5πŸ‘Ž