Country Dictionary

A fork of Rural Dictionary

Jarritos

proper noun
pronounced: 'Här-REE`toess'

a Mexican soft-drink (meaning a carbonated beverage) which has made its way to the States. I my self first saw it at a Bigg's grocery store in Cincinnati, Ohio (where I reside).

Personally, my favorite flavor of Jarritos is Tamarind\Tamarindo. No other soda like it; almost as tantalizing as Jone's Soda. Second would come Tuti-fruit (carbonated Mexican punch).

by Victor Van Styn July 23, 2005

Jarritos

PoS: proper noun
pronounciation: 'Här-REE`toess'

a Mexican softdrink (meaning a carbonated nonalchaholic beverage) which has made its way to the States. I my-self first saw it at a Bigg's grocery store in Cincinnati, Ohio (where I reside), in quaint glass bottles.

Personally, my favorite flavor of Jarritos is Tamarind\Tamarindo. No other soda like it (atleast that I’ve experience the taste to which); almost as tantalizing as the broad asortment the Jones Soda flavors (imho). Second favorite flavor of mine would be Tuti-fruit (carbonated punch Mexi-style).

by Victor Van Styn July 23, 2005

'd

1. used to form the past-tense of a verb, especially of acronym-based verbs or those ending with otherwise an ‘e’ or one of the vowels<a\e\i\o\u\y> (as ending in ‘-ed’ looks a bit stilted when following an ‘e’), in addition to irregular, non-standard, nonlinear, and ‘created’ verbs.

2. used to form a past-participle (less necessary than is the 1st use).

1. In three swipes of his giant masamune, Sephiroth KO'd sprawny Sora. {Translation = In three swipes of his giant masamune, Sephiroth knocked-out sprawny Sora.}
“Did you get rubberband'd in the head again?” {Translation = “Did you get shot in the head by a rubberband again?”

2. As Joey listened to some now-retro'd 90's music on his car radio, his girlfriend, Karen, went on chitchatting with her bffl Sammy in the backseat.



History of the Suffix: in old times, 'd was used to form the past-tense of ALL verbs, especially in print. Example: Ole Faithful rang'd the City Bell at the stroke of Dawn.

by Victor Van Styn July 21, 2005

'd

1. used to form the past-tense of a verb, especially of acronym-based verbs or those ending with otherwise an ‘e’ or one of the vowels<a\e\i\o\u\y> (as ending in ‘-ed’ looks a bit stilted when following an ‘e’), in addition to irregular, non-standard, nonlinear, and ‘created’ verbs.

2. suffix used to form a past-participle (less necessary than is the 1st use).

1. In three swipes of his giant masamune, Sephiroth KO'd sprawny Sora. {Translation = In three swipes of his giant masamune, Sephiroth knocked-out sprawny Sora.}
“Didjuh get rubberband'd in the head again?” {Translation = “Did you get shot in the head by a rubberband again?”

2. As Joey listened to some now-retro'd 90's music on his car radio, his girlfriend, Karen, went on chitchatting with her bffl Sammy in the backseat.



History of the Suffix: in old times, ‘'d’ was used to form the past-tense of ALL verbs, especially in print. Example: Ole Faithful ring'd the City Bell at the stroke of Dawn.

by Victor Van Styn July 25, 2005

ö

the letter ‘o’ with an ümlaut(which obviously is the two dots, ¨) hovering closely over it. Used in German alongside its capital-form{Ö} as well as ä/Ä and ü/Ü.

The letter ‘ö’ is k’rrectly ASCII'd\ASCIIfied into ‘oe’, and ‘Ö’ into ‘Oe’. That is to say, ‘ö’ is commonly transformed into ‘oe’ in-order to conform with the ASCII rule that all characters must be limited to the seventy-nine able to be produced using a standard American keyboard only, while still accurately representing how it is pronounced. For example, ‘möchten’{meaning ‘to would-like’) becomes ‘moechten’.

Compare with the German ASCII-uncool \ ASCII-appropiate letter characters: ä\ae, Ä\Ae, ß\ss\sz{‘'s'-set’\‘'ess'-'tset'’}

by Victor Van Styn August 21, 2005

madd

insane’; ‘wild’; ‘crazy

"Mark, you’re drving like a madd man--Watchthefuckout!!"

by Victor Van Styn August 04, 2005

wbb

short-hand for 'won’t be back'

Dighdeom: Alright, talk t'ya later

Khankle: Yeah, gotta go. Wbb anytime today.

by Victor Van Styn October 15, 2005