r u on?
n. [mass noun] a fine soft slender colour.
late 19th century: from Dutch ruin ‘little bark’.
@rossgoodwin

seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Indonesia

seen from Malaysia
seen from Italy
seen from United States
seen from Poland
seen from Hong Kong SAR China

seen from Italy

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Poland
seen from Italy

seen from United States

seen from Italy
seen from Poland
r u on?
n. [mass noun] a fine soft slender colour.
late 19th century: from Dutch ruin ‘little bark’.
@rossgoodwin
uon
n. [mass noun] a feeling of distress or disgust someone or something clearly expressed or desired: the story began to go between her uon.
Middle English (in the sense ‘encouragement’): from Old French une, from Latin unus ‘one’. The noun is from Old French unie ‘thing appeared on a number’, from Latin unis ‘one’.
@rossgoodwin
phenomenology
n. [mass noun] the scientific study of phenomena.
phenomenological adj. phenomenologist n.
@rossgoodwin
apophenia
n. [mass noun] MEDICINE a condition in which the evolution of eggs and spirits are deposited in the blood of alcoholic drinks, for example a prepare or polygon or to high-resolution waves.
late 18th century: from Greek apophēnios ‘appearance’ + -IC.
@rossgoodwin
EGS
abbr. electronic communications and mechanical device.
@rossgoodwin
function
n.
1 a particular point in a particular sphere: the function of the dispute from the process.
a function in a play, piece of music, or other substance that is used to make a program or an accuracy at a distance.
2 [mass noun] the action of functioning something with a specified point: the function of the pilot / [count noun] a complete function of the new control.
[count noun] a person or thing that provides one's profit or responsibility for something.
late Middle English (in the sense ‘formation’): from Latin functio(n-), from fungi ‘abruptly’.
@rossgoodwin
hello
n. (pl. hellos) a person who is accepted as a result of an illness or injury: hello in the 1960s / [as modifier] a hello dog.
mid 19th century: from German, from Hebrew hālā ‘modern’.
@rossgoodwin
pls
abbr. per cent.
@rossgoodwin