A fork of Rural Dictionary
A foul language term in Cantonese , mainly used in Hong Kong. When someone did something stupid or doing something silly. We will usually call them " on 9 " - Which means " stupid penis " in english. the number " 9 " is from the pronouciation of " penis " in Cantonese. An excellent word for saying this to people in Hong Kong.
Mr.Tung is an on 9. ( Mr.Tung is a stupid penis ) Don't be on 9 la. ( Don't be stupid )
Something you type accidentally when you mean to type :( but don't hit the shift key.
Person 1: my grandpa just died. Person 2: :9 Person 1: wtf is wrong with you?!?1
A "smiley" similar to :P, but meant to indicate something appetizing or drool-inducing. The 9 forms both the smile and the tongue of the face. Often used in chatrooms.
<Village Idiot 472> you're a cock-sucker! <MEsoHOORNY> :9
A number equal to 1 to anyone who understands math. Topic should not even be a debate, however, it is understandibly quite hard to accept by some.
1.) All sequential repeating decimals can be expressed as the repeating series divided by a 9 per each digit. For example, 3/7 = .428571~ Thus, 428571/999999 = .428571~ Therefore, 428571/999999 = 3/7 When we apply this rule to .9~: 9 is the repeating sequence. We put it over an identical number of 9's, which is one 9, thus giving us 9/9, which is 1. 2.) All rational numbers can be expressed as a/b with a and b as integers. .9~ is a rational number. Thusly, it can be expressed as a/b. 9.~'s a/b expression is 1/1. To all those who disagree, I challenge you to find another possible way that .9~ can be expressed as a/b. 3.) For any two numbers, there is an infinite number of other numbers that fit between them. Example: 1.08, and 1.09. 1.081, 1.0801, 1.08001... There are no numbers that can fit between .9~ and 1. thus, they must be equal. Demonstrations: 1.) Define x as .9~ x = .9~ 10x = 9.9~ 10x - x = 9 9x = 9 x = 1 Thus, .9~ = x = 1 2.) 1/3 = .3~ 1/3 X 3 = 1 .3~ X 3 = .9~ If .3~ and 1/3 are equal, identical operations on them result in an equal product. Thus, .9~ = 1. ARGUMENTS: ".9~ is not equal to 1, it gets closer to 1 with each 9 added but never reaches it" Reply: .9~ is a number. This means it has value. The value of .9~ doesn't "get closer" to anything. It is a number, and has value. "If .9~ equals 1, then doesn't 1.9~ equal 2, 2.9~ equal 3, 3.9~ = 4, and so forth?" Reply: Yes. "There is no point at which as certain number of 9's makes .9~ equal 1." Reply: Of course there isn't. If there were a point at which a certain number of nines "made" .9~ equal 1, then it would not be .9~ that equaled 1, just the decimal with enough nines to reach that point. A "certain number of nines" directly contradicts the concept of an infinite string of nines. Approaching the question from this angle is entirely illogical.
An act of licking someone or something.
<%Snake^_^> dude iama get botox on my ballz like dave chappelle <%Kylelotus> :9