A cat consumer is a person who despite having a multitude of choices cannot make up their mind. It can relate to an abundance of clothes / food etc.
Opposite to dog consumer
A: What should I wear to the party? I have nothing fancy enough!
B: You're such a cat consumer! You have at least three dresses that match the occasion!
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one(he/she) who consumes alot of porn by putting it on an storage device or just by looking at it
Erik: hey did you hear about that girl in the school computer lab?
Sandro: You mean that lonley girl who get porn of the web everyday?
Erik: Yeah! she is such a porn consumer!
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The proper way to say the corona virus.
Ha that's killing only boomers. It's a boomer consumer.
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a gmod nextbot that is eating a hotdog but it looks like a hotdog itself
guy: im gonna spawn the consumer nextbot in gmod
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A nasty head-ass nigga who eats fucking earwax because they don't give a fuck about life anymore
Yaphet: "Help me, I'm an earwax consumer, it's true"
Priest Dave (the slave): "I pray for your soul"
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The MOST annoying scam on Urban Dictionary all the time! They pretend to give you a 1000 dollar Wal-Mart card and every third time you open a gift it has one. There are a bunch of fake comments like βone for sale one for me yeahβ and βnow i can buy Xboxβ too easy to figure out. NEVER accept the card unless itβs a fake account.
National consumer center sucks balls.
*noun*; in Keynesian economics, the rate at which aggregate consumption rises in response to a rise in national income.
For example, suppose the marginal propensity to consume (MPC) is 0.95. If the national income is 100 billion dollars, and it rises 10%, then consumption will rise by 9.5 billion, and saving will rise by 0.5 billion.
If this theory is correct, then an expanding economy will suffer insufficient demand for its own output, and a recession will be inevitable.
This is why national governments respond to recessions with deficit spending: they are trying to counteract the MPC's effect on aggregate demand, and bring it in line with potential output.
Not only is the marginal propensity to consume weaker in a wealthy community, but, owing to its accumulation of capital being already larger, the opportunities for further investment are less attractive...
J.M. Keynes, *The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money* (1936), Ch.3
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