The Wickedictionary

From Derek
Revision as of 09:28, 1 July 2010 by Dabbott (talk | contribs) (F)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

The name Wickedictionary is intended to be a play on the word Wiktionary. The idea is to collect definitions of words like in a dictionary, except the definitions must be perverse in the style of Ambrose Bierce's the Devil's Dictionary. The idea is to modernize Ambrose Bierce and come up with a more contemporary and cutting-edge collection of definitions. Anyone is welcome to contribute to this page. If anyone can help me fill in missing sources that would be great. You are welcome to email me definitions. You can make up your own or you can send me existing ones with relevant citations.

This is intended to be humour, there are no sides, and nothing is sacred here. Contradictory definitions are encouraged. The only rule is: if it makes me smile, I'll include it.

Basically any definition that has a surprise twist qualifies for entry here, whether it happens to be cynical or not. The idea is we don't have to necessarily agree with these definitions, but to merely enjoy them for making us think. As Aristotle once said, "It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it."


A

Abstract art: n. a product of the untalented, sold by the unprincipled to the utterly bewildered.[1]

Absurdity: n. a statement or belief manifestly inconsistent with one's own opinion.[2]

Academia: n. a chronic disease characterized by a compulsion to write lengthy specialized treatises in unintelligible vocabularies, for the purpose of rising in the esteem of those similarly afflicted.

Accordion: n. a bagpipe with pleats.

Accountant: n. a dutiful book-balancer whose role within a corporation is to protect if from creative ideas.

Accusation: n. a disguised confession, where the accuser projects his own misdemeanor upon a hapless bystander.[3]

Actor: n. a professional exhibitionist who manufactures emotions in a manner convincing enough to earn a living.

Addict: n. a hobbyist with commitment.[4]

Admiration: n. our feeling of delight that another person resembles us.[5]

Adult: n. 1. a person who has stopped growing at both ends and is now growing in the middle.

Adult: n. 2. a socially obedient child.[6]

Adultery: n. 1. is the application of democracy to love.[7]

Adultery: n. 2. the noble act of sharing taken to it logical limits.[8]

Advertising: n. is the rattling of a stick inside a swill-bucket.[9]

Afternoon: n. that part of the day we spend worrying about how we wasted the morning.

Age: n. the gift of acquiring eyesight too poor to notice any wrinkles.[10]

Agnostic: n. one whose extreme skepticism even keeps them from being an atheist.[11]

Air stewardess: n. a mile high waitress.[12]

Alcoholic: n. someone you don't like who drinks as much as you do.[13]

Alimony: n. is like buying hay for a dead horse.[14]

Ambition: n. 1. is the last refuge of the failure.[15]

Ambition: n. 2. a poor excuse for not having enough sense to be lazy.[16]

Amnesia: n. a condition that enables a woman who has gone through labour to have sex again.

Amnesty: n. the state's magnanimity to those offenders whom it would be too expensive to punish.[17]

Anger: n. is the feeling that makes your mouth work faster than your mind.[18]

Antique: n. an item your grandparents bought, your parents got rid of, and you’re buying again.

Appeaser: n. is one who feeds a crocodile—hoping it will eat him last.[19]

A priori: adj. the term applied to reasoning from pre-existing knowledge, or even cherished prejudices.[20]

Archbishop: n. a Christian ecclesiastic of a rank superior to that attained by Christ.[21]

Art: n. 1. is moral passion married to entertainment. Moral passion without entertainment is propaganda, and entertainment without moral passion is television.[22]

Art: n. 2. is a step from what is obvious and well-known toward what is arcane and concealed.[23]

Art: n. 3. is a collaboration between God and the artist, and the less the artist does the better.[24]

Art: n. 4. is magic delivered from the lie of being truth.[25]

Artist: n. 1. is somebody who produces things that people don't need to have.[26]

Artist: n. 2. being an artist means ceasing to take seriously that very serious person we are when we are not an artist.[27]

Assassination: n. is the extreme form of censorship.[28]

Assonance: n. a rhyme that has gone wrong. [29]

Astrologer: n. an otherwise jobless new age savant who has convinced his clientele that his ability to foretell the distant future is measurably more reliable that his recall of past events from last night's 6 o'clock news.[30]

Atheism: n. 1. one's God-given right to not believe.[31]

Atheism: n. 2. a godless religion that retains all the dogmatic posturing of the faiths it so confidently denies, with few of the consolations.[32]

Atheist: n. 1. the ultimate gambler.

Atheist: n. 2. someone who's all dressed up with no place to go after death.[33]

Atheist: n. 3. one who requires an indefinitely greater measure of faith than to receive all the great truths which atheism would deny.[34]

Atheist: n. 4. one with blind faith in a mistaken belief that the absence of evidence against a null hypothesis confirms it.[35]

Atheist: n. 5. a person who believes in one less god than you do.[36]

Atheist: n. 6. a man who believes himself to be an accident.[37]

Atheist: n. 7. a person who dines at a lavish banquet, believing there is no kitchen, no waste chute, nor chef.[38]

Atheist: n. 8. God's loyal opposition.[39]

Author: n. a writer with connections in the publishing industry.

Autobiography: n. a book written about oneself, now often written by somebody else. [40]

B

Bachelor: n. one who knows more about women than married men; if they didn't they'd be married too.[41]

Backlash: n. the equal and opposite reaction to actions on behalf of women, minorities, political correctness, jogging, spotted owls, oat bran and other timely causes, sometimes legitimate, that have been marketed to the public with fatally obnoxious zeal.

Bagpipes: n. an instrument of torture used by the Scots against other nations.[42]

Bail: n. an opportunity to see if you can get away with it the second time.[43]

Bank: n. 1. a place where money automatically increases in value, especially when we need to borrow some.

Bank: n. 2. an institution that lends money that doesn't actually exist.[44]

Banker: n. one who lends you his umbrella when the sun is shining, but wants it back the minute it begins to rain.[45]

Banking: n. a form of legalized theft where vast profits are made on transactions on monetary instruments that are not underpinned by true products and services, leading to rather spectacular global market crashes from time to time. [46]

Bargain: n. something you can't use offered at a price you can't resist.[47]

Bartender: n. a pharmacist with a limited inventory.

Bathroom: n. a room used by the entire family, believed by all except mothers to be self-cleaning.

Bigotry: n. that which tries to keep truth safe in a grip so tight that kills it.[48]

Bimbo: n. one whose IQ is smaller than their bra size.[49]

Biography: n. a system in which the contradictions of a human life are unified.[50]

Birthday: n. the unique celebration of being one Earth's orbit closer to death.[51]

Black holes: n. are where God divided by zero.[52]

Blogs: n. proof that infinite monkeys on infinite typewriters will only produce grammatically-incorrect, self-indulgent ramblings.[53]

Bonus: n. money your boss gets each year for controlling your department's costs. Of course, if he paid your bonus he wouldn't achieve that target.[54]

Bookcase: n. a piece of furniture used in America to house bowling trophies and Elvis collectibles.[55]

Bore: n. 1. a person who talks when you wish him to listen.[56]

Bore: n. 2. a man who deprives you of solitude without providing you with company.[57]

Bore: n. 3. a man who, when you ask him how he is, tells you.[58]

Boss: n. 1. someone who is early when you are late and late when you are early.

Boss: n. 2. a personal dictator appointed to those of us fortunate enough to live in free societies.[59]

Bravery: n. a dizzying combination of luck and stupidity; the act of one who miscalculates the risks and yet survives by pure chance.[60]

Bride: n. a woman with a fine prospect of happiness behind her.[61]

Broadsheet newspaper: n. a device for helping fools to feel superior.[62]

Building regulations: n. local civic laws regulating the construction of buildings, devised to make planning a bungalow in the Twentieth Century slower than building a cathedral in the Twelfth Century.[63]

Bureaucracy: n. 1. an ingenious scheme by benevolent governments for graciously providing unlimited mass employment.[64]

Bureaucracy: n. 2. a group of over educated and underwhelming individuals who combine mystification and ineffectiveness in order to facilitate entropy.[65]

Bureaucracy: n. 3. a government-funded distortion of national unemployment figures. [66]

C

Car: n. a motorized cubicle on wheels in which using a phone whilst driving is illegal. However, shaving, knitting, origami folding, eating, undressing, and performing lewd acts whilst driving are perfectly acceptable and fundamental to human liberty.[67]

Compiler: n. (computing term) a program written specifically to treat a higher level language program as data, reduce some of it to machine code, rearrange the rest into another higher level language such as Greek, display an alarming and incomprehensible message such as 'Fatal Internal Stack Failure' and then give up.[68]

Canberra: n. a lost opportunity to toss a coin between Melbourne and Sydney. Can also be used as the exemplar for determining shades of grey.[69]

Catholicism: n. a powerful multilateral platform working under the ill-informed belief of its own righteousness. Noted for use of effective group think methodologies spanning from 11th Century to 19th Century in order to sustain power and control. See Inquisition.[70]

Canonization: n. a posthumous elevation to sainthood; a state of grace attained by religious leaders through miracles, by politicians via assassination, and by rock stars as a result of a timely drug overdose.

Capital punishment: n. the controversial right of the state to end a life by gassing, shooting, hanging, needling or quick-frying; believed effective as a deterrent to future crimes by the same individual.[71]

Celebrity: n. someone who is known to many persons he is glad he doesn't know.[72]

Celibacy: n. 1. a respite from the pleasures and perils of sexual congress; a way of life traditionally practiced by Catholic priests, monks, Shakers, stamp collectors, overly zealous careerists, Star Trek fans, hermits, and amoebas. [73]

Celibacy: n. 2. a renouncement of pleasures of the flesh followed by indefinite abstinence, usually lasting no more than three days with best of intentions. [74]

Celibacy: n. 3. mind over hormones.[75]

Censor: n. a man who knows more than he thinks you ought to.[76]

Chess: n. is a foolish expedient for making idle people believe they are doing something very clever, when they are only wasting their time. [77]

Chicken: n. an animal you eat before its born and after its dead.

Childhood: n. the rapidly shrinking interval between infancy and first arrest on a drug or weapons charge.[78]

Cinnamon: n. sawdust.[79]

Civilization: n. is the limitless multiplication of unnecessary necessities. [80]

Classic: n. a book that everyone praises, but no one reads.

Clothing: n. a means to allow nakedness at one's choosing.[81]

College: n. the four year period when parents are permitted access to the telephone.

Colloquialism: n. a formal word for an informal word. [82]

Comedian: n. one whose duty it is to find out where the line is drawn and cross it deliberately.[83]

Comedy: n. is simply a funny way of being serious.[84]

Commitment: n. the capacity of a would-be husband to do what he's told.[85]

Committee: n. 1. individuals who can do nothing individually and sit and decide that nothing can be done together.

Committee: n. 2. a group of the unwilling, picked from the unfit, to do the unnecessary.[86]

Committee: n. 3. a cul-de-sac down which ideas are lured and then quietly strangled.[87]

Communism: n. is largely made up of prophecies, like any other revealed religion.[88]

Common sense: n. is nothing more than a deposit of prejudices laid down by the mind before you reach eighteen.[89]

Compromise: n. the art of dividing a cake in such a way that everyone believes he got the bigger piece.

Computer: n. an electronic time-saving device that is commonly used for time-wasting activities.[90]

Computer virus: n. a welcomed device for keeping anti-virus software manufacturers in business.[91]

Concept: n. any idea for which an outside consultant billed you more than $25,000.

Conception: n. the miracle of producing losers from winners.[92]

Conclusion: n. the place where you got tired of thinking.[93]

Conference: n. the confusion of one person multiplied by the number present.

Conference room: n. a place where everyone talks, no one listens, and everyone disagrees later.

Confidence: n. the feeling one experiences before one fully understands the situation.[94]

Congratulation: n. the civility of envy.[95]

Conscience: n. 1. the inner voice that warns us somebody may be looking.[96]

Conscience: n. 2. is that which hurts when all your other parts feel so good.

Conscience: n. 3. is what makes a boy tell his mother before his sister does.[97]

Conscience: n. 4. is that which makes cowards of us all.[98]

Conservative: n. 1. one who admires radicals centuries after they're dead.[99]

Conservative: n. 2. a statesman who is enamored of existing evils, as distinguished from the Liberal who wishes to replace them with others. [100]

Conservative: n. 3. in the US, one who believes that non-conservatives in other countries are either 'commies' or socialists and that conservatives in other countries are either despots or terrorists.[101]

Conservative: n. 4. one tending to maintain existing views and conditions; often extending to faithfully conserving his maturity from when he was 9 years old.[102]

Conservative: n. 5. in the US, one with a faith so large that he can move mountains, dispel global warming, and cause abiotic oil to eternally spout forth from the earth.[103]

Consistency: n. 1. is the last refuge of the unimaginative.[104]

Consistency: n. 2. is the enemy of enterprise, just as symmetry is the enemy of art.[105]

Consult: n. to seek approval for a course of action already decided upon.[106]

Consultant: n. 1. a jobless person who shows executives how to work.[107]

Consultant: n. 2. one who has credibility because he's not dumb enough to work at your company.[108]

Contraception: n. an opportunity for one party to 'accidentally' produce a pregnancy without mutual consent.[109]

Contract: n. a document that makes extortion legal.[110]

Corporation: n. an ingenious device for obtaining individual profit without individual responsibility.[111]

Cosmetics: n. 1. a means of presenting goods without necessarily guaranteeing their delivery.[112]

Cosmetics: n. 2. used for enhancing a woman's beauty - a sign of things not necessarily to come.[113]

Courtesy: n. the art of yawning with your mouth closed.

Creativity: n. 1. is knowing how to hide your sources.[114]

Creativity: n. 2. is allowing yourself to make mistakes. Art is knowing which ones to keep.[115]

Criminal: n. a person with predatory instincts who hasn't sufficient capital to form a corporation.

Criminal lawyer: n. a tautology.

Critic: n. one who searches for ages for the wrong word, which, to give due credit, is eventually found.[116]

Criticism: n. is prejudice made plausible.[117]

Crouton: n. stale bread.[118]

Cubicle: n. a sensory deprivation chamber designed to boost productivity in the workplace, at least according to people who work in corner offices with large windows.[119]

Cubism: n. is where the laws of perspective have been repealed.[120]

Cult film: n. a movie seen about fifty times by about that many people.[121]

Cynic: n. 1. a man who, when he smells flowers, looks around for a coffin.[122]

Cynic: n. 2. is what an idealist calls a realist. [123]

Cynic: n. 3. a man who knows the price of everything and the value of nothing.[124]

Cynic: n. 4. an idealist who's rose-coloured glasses have been removed, snapped in two, and stomped into the ground immediately improving his vision.[125]

Cynic: n. 5. a person searching for an honest man, with a stolen lantern.[126]

Cynic: n. 6. a blackguard whose faulty vision sees things as they are, not as they ought to be.[127]

Cynicism: n. the fine art of expressing the truth without its pants on.[128]

D

Dancing: n. a perpendicular expression of a horizontal desire.[129]

Dating: t.v. an elaborate prelude to mating that fulfills much the same function as the sniffing ritual in dogs, but without its forthright honesty.

Die: v. to stop sinning suddenly.[130]

Death: n. that which is caused by swallowing small amounts of saliva over a long period of time.[131]

Debugging: n. the process of removing software bugs, as opposed to programming that is the process of putting them in.[132]

Defence: n. an illusion of security for the public, not the enemy. [133]

Democracy: n. 1. the theory that the common people know what they want, and deserve to get it good and hard.[134]

Democracy: n. 2. is also a form of worship. It is the worship of jackals by jackasses.[135]

Democracy: n. 3. is the pathetic belief in the wisdom of collective ignorance.[136]

Democracy: n. 4. is a place where numerous elections are held at great cost without issues and with interchangeable candidates.[137]

Democracy: n. 5. is the recurrent suspicion that more than half of the people are right more than half of the time.[138]

Democracy: n. 6. true democracy is that one moron is equal to one genius.[139]

Democracy: n. 7. a democracy is the name politicians give to their electorate when they need them.

Democracy: n. 8. a system which ensures that everybody gets what nobody wants. [140]

Democracy: n. 9. a dictatorship by the corporations with the money to influence mindless votes.[141]

Democracy: n. 10. is that which guarantees an equality of opportunity, but not an equality of conditions.[142]

Denial: n. that which keeps an optimist from becoming a pessimist.[143]

Depression: n. 1. that which causes women to either eat or go shopping, or men to invade another country.[144]

Depression: n. 2. one-sided bipolar disorder.[145]

Diplomacy: n. the patriotic art of lying for one's country.[146]

Diplomat: n. a person who can tell you to go to hell in such a way that you actually look forward to the trip.[147]

Disk crash: n. a typical computer response to any critical deadline.

Divorce: n. 1. is the one human tragedy that reduces everything to cash. [148]

Divorce: n. 2. from the Latin word meaning to rip out a man's genitals through his wallet.[149]

Divorce: n. 3. the future tense of marriage.

Dressed: n. the state of being naked under one's clothing. [150]

Do-gooder: n. one with no time to be good, as he is too busy doing good[151]

Dotcom: n. a valiant online enterprise that typically favors coolness over profitability; for this reason, esp. following the Crash of 2000, now commonly referred to by traumatized investors as a 'dotbomb.' [152]

Doubt: n. 1. is a pain too lonely to know that faith is his twin brother.[153]

Doubt: n. 2. that which grows with knowledge.[154]

Doubt: n. 3. is an absolute certainty in the belief that nothing is black and white.[155]

Doubt: n. 4. beliefs are what divide people. Doubt unites them.[156]

Downsizing: v. the act of ejecting a large number of employees from a company, as opposed to 'firing' that is a term reserved for the privileged few.[157]

Dust: n. mud with all the juice sucked out.

Dyslexia: n. a medical condition whose sufferers couldn't possibly spell it.[158]

E

Economic growth: n. paying out twice as much in taxes as one formerly got in wages.[159]

Economic sanctions: n. a welcomed ticket for a dictator to stir up internal patriotism that gives him carte blanche to exert an even tighter stranglehold on his regime.[160]

Economist: n. an expert who will know tomorrow why the things he predicted yesterday didn't happen today.[161]

Edgy: n. sufficiently abrasive and obnoxious to captivate an urban audience.[162]

Editor: n. in the publishing industry, a diligent intellectual drudge condemned to a lifetime of embarrassingly meagre pay, so that multi-thousand-dollar contracts might be awarded to semi-literate celebrities for their ghost-written memoirs.

Education: n. 1. is the thing that interferes with learning.[163]

Education: n. 2. a method whereby one acquires a higher grade of prejudices.[164]

Egoist: n. 1. person of low taste, more interested in himself than in me.[165]

Egoist: n. 2. one who rises above the slimy obsequiousness that humility brings.[166]

Egotism: n. is the anesthetic given by a kindly nature to relieve the pain of being a damned fool.[167]

Elder: n. one who asserts his authority over you by virtue of his immutable age difference, but to whose chagrin finds that you rapidly sneak up to him in terms of age ratio.[168]

Election: n. 1. a democratic ritual carried out in order to check if the polls were right.[169]

Election: n. 2. that in which each party steals so many articles of faith from the other, and the candidates spend so much time making each other's speeches, that by the time election day is past there is nothing much to do save turn the sitting rascals out and let a new gang in.[170]

Election: n. 3. a sort of advance auction sale of stolen goods.[171]

Electricity: n. is really just organized lightning.[172]

Electrocution: n. burning at the stake with all the modern improvements.

Emissions trading: n. 1. a brilliant mechanism allowing corporations to pollute the environment guilt-free, whilst driving up the prices for further corporate gain.[173]

Emissions trading: n. 2. a pollution control scheme that is rather like allowing a criminal to buy his way out of jail based on finding one honest person in the world to apparently reduce the overall crime footprint.[174]

Encryption: n. (computing term) a powerful algorithmic encoding technique designed to deny useful content to casual readers. Often used in the creation of computer manuals.[175]

Enemy: n. 1. a fiction abroad to distract us from domestic reality.[176]

Enemy: n. 2. is anyone who tells the truth about you.[177]

Entrepreneur: n. one who satisfies his own material cravings by catering to those of the public.

Erratic: n. consistently inconsistent.[178]

Etc: abbr. an abbreviation inserted into a written text to make others believe that you know more than you actually do.

Ethics: n. 1. an unspoken code of decency that once governed most business and professional transactions, at least theoretically.

Ethics: n. 2. a fluctuating commodity that declines in direct proportion to the amount of money at stake.

Ethics: n. 3. the best reasons in the world why people should think like you do.[179]

Etiquette: n. a social code devised and memorized by members of the upper classes for the purpose of screening out raffish pretenders to their ranks.

Euphemism: n. a figure of speech in which the speaker or writer makes his expression a good deal softer than the facts would warrant him in doing.[180]

Euthanasia: n. the art of persuading elderly loaded relatives to bring their wills into effect.

Exaggeration: n. is truth that has lost its temper.[181]

Excuse: n. is a perfectly good reason that has been rejected by those in authority.[182]

Experience: n. 1. is the name everyone gives to their mistakes.[183]

Experience: n. 2. is the ability to repeat one's mistakes with ever-increasing confidence.[184]

Experience: n. 3. is something you don't get until just after you need it.[185]

Experiment: n. the fine art of fudging scientific data so that they mesh with one's original hypothesis.

Expert: n. 1. a person sufficiently jaded with all the facts that he declares when something cannot be done.[186]

Expert: n. 2. a person who avoids the small errors while sweeping on to the grand fallacy. [187]

Expert: n. 3. a person who is more than 50 miles from home, has no responsibility for implementing the advice he gives, and shows slides. [188]

Expert: n. 4. a person who knows more and more about less and less until he knows absolutely everything about nothing.

Explanation: n. condensed descriptions.[189]

F

Facebook: n. a social networking website that brings people spread over a large metropolis all the advantages of a close knit community, including lack of privacy. [190]

Fact: n. 1. a folly committed by enough of the right people to confer on it the badge of status.

Fact: n. 2. information gathered with great accuracy, only to be distorted later.

Factionalism: n. the abiding human need to create group conflicts based on religion, politics, race, gender, class or whether toilet paper should be pulled over or under the roll.[191]

Faith: n. 1. an illogical belief in the occurrence of the improbable.[192]

Faith: n. 2. is an oasis in the heart which will never be reached by the caravan of thinking.[193]

Faith: n. 3. is our normal mode of operation, until we punctuate it with odd moments of reason.[194]

Faith: n. 4. is not wanting to know what is true.[195]

Fashion: n. 1. a form of ugliness so intolerable that we have to alter it every six months. [196]

Fashion: n. 2. a means of expressing one's individuality by wearing and doing exactly the same things as others.[197]

Fatherhood: n. is pretending the present you love most is soap-on-a-rope.[198]

Federal budget: n. in the U.S., a miraculous machine that continually cranks out more money than it takes in; unfortunately not yet licensed for use in the home.

Female: n. in biology, the thing that is more likely to bite you.[199]

Feminism: n. 1. is complaining about the male representation of God, whilst overlooking the male representation of the devil. This selectivity extends to altering moot words such as 'chairman' and 'mankind', whilst rather cunningly retaining 'henchman' and 'manslaughter'.[200]

Feminism: n. 2. a movement created to allow ugly women access to the mainstream of society.[201]

Feminism: n. 3. a militant over-reaction to a historically male narrative.[202]

Feminist: n. a woman who intends to fulfil her destiny by aping the worst traits of her oppressors.

Finance: n. the art of passing money from hand to hand until it finally disappears.[203]

Fishing: n. a venerable contest in which modern man pits his intelligence and technology against the native wit of primitive aquatic vertebrates, and generally finishes second.

Flashlight: n. a case for storing dead batteries and light bulbs.

Flattery: n. a gift-wrapped insult.

Flying: adj. is learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss.[204]

Food: n. an important part of a balanced diet.[205]

Food chain: n. the vast hierarchy of predators, with plankton at the bottom and marketing executives at the top.

Fool: n. 1. a condition a man may not be aware of, until he is constantly reminded of it after marriage.[206]

Fool: n. 2. one who announces loudly that he doesn't suffer others like him gladly.

Forgiveness: n. that which is inspired by revenge.[207]

Franchise: n. a form of business that aims at internationally spawning clones of itself for world domination, providing goods and services that are meticulously consistent in quality. Consistently bad.[208]

Freedom: n. 1. in the U.S., the sacred right to speak and act according to one's conscience, except when dealing with sensitive special-interest groups or militant Republican administrations. [209]

Freedom: n. 2. what the U.S. frequently exports to developing nations, by force if necessary.[210]

Friend: n. 1. is one who knows all about you, and still likes you.[211]

Friend: n. 2. is not necessarily one of the people you like best, but merely one of those who got there first.[212]

Fun: n. a form of enjoyment that advertising agencies would have you believe everyone, except yourself, is having.[213]

Fundamentalist: n. 1. a person self-imprisoned on a railway platform, who missed the train of life whilst arguing over really important things such as different interpretations of the station timetable.[214]

Fundamentalist: n. 2. in the US, one who is vehemently opposed to the suggestion of any hereditary descendence from an ape and yet behaves like one in matters of foreign policy.[215]

Fundamentalist: n. 3. one whose fear of uncertainty extends to his fear of diversity.[216]

G

Gambling: n. a tax on the mathematically impaired. [217]

Geek: n. a person whose experience of lingerie is limited to shop windows and catalogues. Geeks divide their own clothes into two piles - filthy, and filthy but wearable.[218]

Genealogy: n. an account of one's descent from an ancestor who did not particularly care to trace his own. [219]

Genius: n. one who is clever enough to ensure no one is watching when he luckily stumbles on a good idea.[220]

Gentleman: n. 1. formerly the male exemplar of honour, nobility and other behavioural relics from the Age of Chivalry; now dismissed as someone with a testosterone deficiency.

Gentleman: n. 2. a gentlemen is simply a patient wolf.[221]

Gigolo: n. a man whose reputation has been eagerly created by numerous individual women, and yet meets with their collective disapproval.[222]

Girlfriend: n. a man's future ex-wife.

Global warming: n. a meteorological phenomenon cited to explain the appearance of three consecutive days of fine weather in a British summer.[223]

Good judgment: n. that which comes from experience, and experience comes from bad judgment. [224]

Gossip: n. a person who will never tell a lie if the truth will do more damage.

Grandparents: n. the people who think your children are wonderful even though they're sure you're not raising them right.

Guerilla: n. what the enemy calls your freedom fighter.[225]

Gym: n. a sacred modern temple of self-flagellation that extends one's lifespan for more of the same.[226]

H

Hardware: n. the equipment used to reveal software faults.[227]

Hard work: n. is simply the refuge of people who have nothing whatever to do.[228]

Happiness: n. 1. an agreeable sensation arising from contemplating the misery of another.[229]

Happiness: n. 2. a form of self-denial about the future, due to an exaggerated sense of satisfaction about the present.[230]

Haute cuisine: n. the fine art of serving cold soup on purpose.

Headache: n. that which is instantly cured by sex and yet prohibits any treatment.[231]

Health: n. 1. a delicate equilibrium that may be upset by smoking too many cigarettes or reading too many alarming medical studies.[232]

Health: n. 2. is merely the slowest possible rate at which one can die.

Health food: n. a family of bland, marginally edible grains, beans, sprouts and other vegetative matter that presumably fortifies the body as effectively as it wilts the spirit.

Heir: n. the idle offspring of a workaholic.[233]

Hell: n. 1. a perpetual holiday.[234]

Hell: n. 2. Italian punctuality, German humour, and English wine. [235]

Hell: n. 3. eternal torment reserved for the afterlife or available now on an installment plan, known as marriage.[236]

Hermit: n. one with no peer pressure.[237]

Hero: n. someone who is talented at getting other people killed.[238]

Herpes: n. the affliction of a latter-day leper, rendering the victim untouchable except by fellow sufferers, who must then spend their lives searching for each other like fireflies in the twilight.[239]

High street: n. a generally imposing thoroughfare running through a district of empty shop fronts.

Hip: adj. smartly attuned to the latest cutting-edge cliches.[240]

Historian: n. 1. an unsuccessful novelist.[241]

Historian: n. 2. one whose future lies in the past.

History: n. 1. a fable agreed upon.[242]

History: n. 2. an account of events written down by the winners.[243]

History: n. 3. is a gallery of pictures in which there are few originals and many copies.[244]

Homophobe: n. someone who projects his own self-hate onto those that are not in self-denial.[245]

Hope: n. is nature's veil for hiding truth's nakedness.[246]

Horoscope: n. a prediction that is always true due to sufficient generality.[247]

Hors d’oeuvres n. a sandwich cut into 20 pieces.

Hotel: n. a refuge from home life.[248]

Human: n. 1. a minor bipedal life form extant on a squalid little planet named Earth, in a backwater little-known galaxy; they are also known as 'Earthlings'. Humans are characterized by an exaggerated sense of self-entitlement, display a collective form of narcissistic personality disorder, and are generally regarded as the rednecks of the universe. Their problems appear to stem from a disingenuous form of business transaction they call 'land ownership.' They are at a primitive stage of development, thankfully can only sense 3-dimensions, and so are unaware of the rest of us. They are generally thought to be of no threat to the Federation of Planets, as by the time they figure out how to communicate with higher dimensions they will have annihilated themselves anyway. The Federation has blacklisted them as pariahs of the universe and so all funding for academic study of these obnoxious creatures has been suspended for 10 million years or until when their petty factious behaviour ceases, whichever comes soonest.[249]

Human: n. 2. one who is almost unique in having the ability to learn from the experience of others, but also remarkable for the apparent disinclination to do so.[250]

Human: n. 3. one who smart enough to have ideas but foolish enough to believe them.[251]

Human: n. 4. one who does irrational things in the pursuit of phenomenally unlikely payoffs.[252]

Human resources: n. corporate nomenclature intended to confer greater dignity on personnel managers while reducing everyone else in the company to the status of bauxite or wood-pulp.[253]

Humility: n. a quality that disappears the moment you think you have it.

Humour: n. 1. an almost physiological response to fear.[254]

Humour: n. 2. a way of holding off how awful life can be.[255]

Hunger: n. the best sauce.[256]

Hunk: n. a man freely viewed as a sex object by women who refuse to be viewed as such themselves, and generally aren't anyway.[257]

Husband: n. a person who empties the waste paper bin and believes that he has cleaned the whole house.[258]

Hyperactive children: n. a cheap and relatively clean energy source that might be put to good use after we deplete the planet's supply of fossil fuels. [259]

Hypocrisy: n. is the vaseline of social intercourse.[260]

Hypocondria: n. the only illness a hypochondriac thinks he or she doesn't have.

I

Idea: n. an idea is that which puts the truth in check mate.[261]

Idealism: n. is when men get into trouble by taking their visions and hallucinations too seriously.[262]

Ignorance: n. that which is not as vast as our failure to use what we know.[263]

Illegal immigrant: n. a hapless foreigner who peacefully enters a country with the noble purpose of propping up its economy, by performing all the jobs that local inhabitants refuse to do, thereby sacrificing himself for the greater good; as opposed to a blood thirsty foreign warlord who rapes, pillages, and dominates a country, who with his descendants then gets disingenuously elevated to 'ruling class' status.[264]

Imitation: n. is the sincerest form of flattery. [265]

Immorality: n. the morality of those who are having a better time.[266]

Impossibility: n. that which often has a kind of integrity to it, which the merely improbable lacks.[267]

Income tax: n. is the hardest thing in the world to understand.[268]

Incredulity: n. the difficulty in accepting that a man is telling the truth, when you know that you would lie if you were in his place.[269]

Inflation: n. cutting money in half without damaging the paper.

Information: n. a somewhat random sequence of symbols that has value to its beholder.[270]

Innovation: n. the rediscovery of a forgotten old trick , within a modern context.[271]

Insanity: n. 1. is doing the same thing, over and over again, but expecting different results.[272]

Insanity: n. 2. is inflation of the ego to its ultimate.[273]

Insurance: n. a form of gambling in which we bet against our chance of escaping disaster, and win only when we lose. [274]

International relations: n. a questionable view held by a sovereign state that they relate to another sovereign state in a sophisticated and meaningful manner.[275]

Internet: n. the most sophisticated technological network ever created, able to link the sum of the world's knowledge and used to share funny pictures of cats.[276]

Intuition: n. is a suspension of logic due to impatience.[277]

IQ: n. the number that predicts the extent to which one will perform successfully on subsequent IQ tests. [278]

J

Job: n. the ideal gift for a high school or college graduate.[279]

Joke: n. a form of short story where all the information comes at the end.[280]

Judge: n. is a law student who marks his own examination papers.[281]

Junk food: n. cheap, satisfying, flavoursome victuals used as a substitute for real food and consisting mainly of salt, fat and sugar, deep-fried to bring out their full atherosclerotic potential. [282]

Jury: n. 1. a group of twelve men who, having lied to the judge about their hearing, health and business engagements, have failed to fool him.[283]

Jury: n. 2. a panel of amateurs called upon to decide life-or-death matters in court.[284]

Justice: n. a decision in your favour.

Just war: n. the theory that nine of Ten Commandments are inviolate, but that one can be selective when it comes to killing. Under this theory, beliefs in 'just theft' or 'just adultery,' for example, are punishable by hanging or lethal injection. [285]

K

Kill: v.t. to create a vacancy without nominating a successor.[286]

Kiss: v. to get two people so close together that they can't see anything wrong with each other.

Kleptomaniac: n. one who steals for pleasure rather than material gain; a thief with breeding.

L

Language: n. 1. a tool for concealing the truth.[287]

Language: n. 2. that which man invented to satisfy his deep need to complain.[288]

Language: n. 3. a virus from outer space.[289]

Laptop computer: n. a device invented to force businessmen to work at home, on vacation, and on business trips.

Last orders: n. a daily 15 minute period generally used as a rehearsal for the end of the world.

Law: n. is that which in its majestic equality, forbids the rich as well as the poor to sleep under bridges, to beg in the streets, and to steal bread.[290]

Lawyer: n. 1. is one who protects us against robbers by taking away the temptation.[291]

Lawyer: n. 2. personal advocate hired to bend the law on behalf of a paying client; for this reason considered the most suitable background for entry into politics.[292]

Legal: n. is what formerly meant lawful; now it means loophole[293]

Legend: n. a lie that has attained the dignity of age.[294]

Lesbianism: n. a double jeopardy relationship where both parties argue under the influence of PMS.[295]

Liberty: n. the right to tell people what they do not want to hear.[296]

Lie: n. 1. an epistemological problem.[297]

Lie: n. 2. economy of truth.

Life: n. 1. is a sexually transmitted disease and invariably fatal. [298]

Life: n. 2. is what kills you in the end.[299]

Life: n. 3. is the art of drawing without an eraser.[300]

Life: n. 4. a sequence of events one is not prepared for.[301]

Life: n. 5. is a series of collisions with the future.[302]

Life: n. 6. is a constant oscillation between the sharp horns of dilemmas.[303]

Life insurance: n. a contract that keeps you poor all your life so that you can die rich.

Line: n. the shortest distance between two points, for those who are too lazy to search for a space-time wormhole through the universe.[304]

Literature: n. an insider's newsletter about affairs relating to molecules, of no importance to anything in the Universe but a few molecules who have the disease called 'thought'.[305]

Logic: n. 1. the art of thinking and reasoning in strict accordance with the limitations and incapacities of the human misunderstanding.[306]

Logic: n. 2. is the art of going wrong with confidence.

Loser: n. a highly successfully person who impeccably lives up to measures not sanctioned by the majority.[307]

Lost: n. in the US, an interminable TV series proving an exception to the rule that one should never read a spoiler.[308]

Love: 1. n. is the delusion that one woman differs from another.[309]

Love: 2. n. is the triumph of imagination over intelligence.[310]

Love: 3. n. is a temporary insanity curable by marriage.[311]

Love: 4. n. is staying up all night with a sick child, or a healthy adult.

Love: 5. n. an endorphin-induced hallucinatory state designed by mother Nature to trick us into procreation.[312]

Love: 6. n. is that which conquers all things except poverty and toothache.[313]

Love: 7. n. a state of perceptual anesthesia - to mistake an ordinary young woman for a goddess.[314]

Loyalty scheme: n. a corporate device for limiting customer choice.[315]

Luck: n. the explanation for success of those we don't like.[316]

M

Mad: adj. affected with a high degree of intellectual independence.[317]

Maintenance-free: adj. irreparable.[318]

Majority: n. a large group of people who have gotten tired of thinking and have decided to accept somebody else’s opinion.

Management: n. 1. a class of semi-skilled corporate hirelings whose rise within the organization correlates directly with the amount of work they delegate to their more talented underlings.[319]

Management: n. 2. administration.[320]

Management consultancy: n. a highly effective and legally permissible confidence trick.[321]

Manifesto: n. a statement of what you would get up to if you had talent, honour and principles.

Marriage: n. 1. is the only war in which you sleep with the enemy.[322]

Marriage: n. 2. is an alliance entered into by a man who can't sleep with the window shut, and a woman who can't sleep with the window open.[323]

Marriage: n. 3. is nature's way of keeping us from fighting with strangers.[324]

Marriage: n. 4. is when a woman exchanges the attentions of many men for the inattention of one.[325]

Marriage: n. 5. is the chief cause of divorce.[326]

Marriage: n. 6. a situation where a man loses his bachelor's degree and a woman gains her masters.

Marriage: n. 7. the demonstration that warfare between the sexes does not work, thus serving as a salient reminder that warfare between the races is equally doomed.[327]

Marriage: n. 8. a bond formed by mutual lack of common sense.

Martial arts: n. a family of Asiatic self-defense disciplines consisting largely of sweeping ornamental gestures of the arms and legs; amusing to look at but disappointingly ineffective when one's opponent is armed with a semi-automatic.[328]

Martyrdom: n. is the only way a man can become famous without ability.[329]

Mastication: n. gastronomic music performed on the xylophone of the mandibles.[330]

Mathematical proof: n. is the demonstration that a proposition is correct with a level of certainty that at least two mathematicians somewhere in the world understand it.[331]

Mathematician: n. 1. a device for turning coffee into theorems.[332]

Mathematician: n. 2. one well-versed in calculus of the variations, Riemann manifolds, and higher algebras, but who cannot count, do simple arithmetic or balance his accounts.[333]

Mathematics: n. 1. a product of the human imagination that sometimes works on simplified models of reality.[334]

Mathematics: n. 2. is a divine madness of the human spirit, a refuge from the goading urgency of contingent happenings.[335]

Mathematics: n. 3. is a game played according to certain simple rules with meaningless marks on paper.[336]

Maturity: n. 1. the status obtained after a sufficient number of years of immaturity have elapsed.[337]

Maturity: n. 2. is a state we reach the day we don't need to be lied to about anything.[338]

Metaphysics: n. is the finding of bad reasons for what we believe upon instinct; but to find these reasons is no less an instinct.[339]

Method actor: n. one who can't act, so instead becomes the character.[340]

Military action: n. an ultimate gift to a regime that gives what its hardliners were actively seeking to provoke, in order to unify their own internal divisions.[341]

Military intelligence: n. a contradiction in terms.[342]

Military justice: n. is to justice what military music is to music.[343]

Minimalism: n. a rather long word for describing the opposite.[344]

Mining: n. the rape of virgin soil, to avoid the monotony of recycling.[345]

Miser: n. a person who lives poor so that he can die rich.

Misogynist: n. a man who hates women as much as women hate one another.[346]

Mission statement: n. a corporate creed passed on to employees so they can remember why they’re skipping lunch.[347]

Moderation: n. a form of extremism that places a tight grip upon the human impulse.[348]

Money: n. a medium of exchange whose chief value lies in the fact that one lives in a world in which it is overestimated.[349]

Monogamy: n. bigamy is having a wife too many, monogamy is the same.[350]

Moral indignation: n. is jealousy with a halo.[351]

Morality: n. is the theory that every human act must be either right or wrong, and that 99% of them are wrong.[352]

Morals: n. excuses for not behaving badly.[353]

Mother: n. someone who thinks that girls who go after her son are brazen and the ones who don’t are stupid.

Motivation: n. the point reached by individuals when they have put off everything else, including procrastination.[354]

Multilateralism: n. 1. an attempt to create polite mob rule. [355]

Multilateralism: n. 2. a useful form of employment for surplus public servants who wish to live in Paris.[356]

Murder: v. the act of killing, unless it is done in large numbers and to the sound of trumpets.[357]

Mythology: n. the early primitive beliefs of a society, as opposed to the real account that it invents later.[358]

N

Nail polish: n. part of an assortment of make-up items such as lipstick, eyeliner, blush etc. which ironically makes a woman look better whilst making her young daughter look like a 'tramp'.

Nation: n. a society united by delusions about its ancestry and by common hatred of its neighbors. [359]

Nationalism: n. the habit of assuming that human beings can be classified like insects and that whole blocks of millions or tens of millions of people can be confidently labelled "good" or "bad." [360]

Necessity: n. almost any luxury you see in the house of a neighbour.

Neighbour: n. one whom we are commanded to love as ourselves, and who does all he knows how to make us disobedient.[361]

Nepotism: n. a sincere belief that charity begins at home.[362]

Nerd: n. a person who uses the telephone to talk to other people about telephones. [363]

Nerds: n. a race of socially inept, fashion-challenged technophiles that are venerated as it is they that inheriteth the Earth.[364]

Neurotic: n. someone who worries about things that didn't happen in the past instead of worrying about something that won't happen in the future, like normal people.

Newspaper: n. a device for making the ignorant more ignorant and the crazy crazier.[365]

Nominee: n. a modest person shrinking from the distinction of private life and diligently seeking the dishonorable obscurity of public office.[366]

Normal: n. is the average of deviance.[367]

Notoriety: n. the fame of one's competitor.[368]

Novel: n. a well-padded short story.[369]

Nuclear power station: n. an economical way of creating a nuclear weapons infrastructure, at the expense of uneconomical electricity for the masses.[370]

Nuclear war: n. that in which all men are cremated equal.[371]

Nuclear weapon: n. a means of bringing about ultimate peace—the cherished peace of silence that total annihilation thankfully brings.[372]

O

Oats: n. a grain which in England is generally given to horses, but in Scotland supports the people.[373]

Obsession: n. commitment with fervour.[374]

Obvious: n. that which is never seen until someone expresses it simply.[375]

Office: n. a place where you relax after your strenuous home life.

Office politics: n. a system of secret alliances, treacherous intrigues, backstabbings and petty rivalries designed to relieve the tedium of corporate life. The chief legacy of Byzantine civilization in the Western world, appropriately modified for our times; instead of blinding or maiming one's rivals, one simply mutilates their egos.[376]

Oil: n. the flammable liquid residue of fossilized prehistoric plants and beasts, found to be suitable for fuelling engines and Middle East conflicts. [377]

Old age: n. 1. is when regrets take the place of dreams. [378]

Old age: n. 2. is fifteen years older than I am.[379]

Old age: n. 3. is when competence is a turn on.[380]

Online: n. offlife. [381]

Ontology: n. the theory that there are multiple universes with only one having the property of existence.

Opportunist: n. a person who starts taking bath if he accidentally falls into a river.

Opportunity: n. that which comes brilliantly disguised as an insoluble problem.[382]

Optimism: n. is inevitably the last hope of the defeated.[383]

Optimist: n. 1. one who believes the inevitable will be postponed.[384]

Optimist: n. 2. one who has never had much experience.[385]

Optimist: n. 3. one who doesn't have the patience to worry.[386]

Oratory: n. a conspiracy between speech and action to cheat the understanding.[387]

Organ donor: n. someone who looks forward to being outlived by his liver.[388]

Orthodoxy: n. is the ability to say two and two make five when faith requires it. [389]

P

Pacifist: n. one who does not kill his enemies, but reads their obituaries with great pleasure.[390]

Paradox: n. 1. a conflict between reality and your feeling of what reality 'ought to be.'[391]

Paradox: n. 2. a paradox is nothing else than grandiose thoughts in embryo.[392]

Parallel: adj. (computing term) being or pertaining to everything going wrong at once.[393]

Patience: n. a minor form of despair, disguised as a virtue.[394]

Patriot: n. 1. is one who gets a parking ticket and rejoices that the system works.

Patriot: n. 2. one who is ready to defend his country against his government.[395]

Patriotism: n. 1. is the virtue of the vicious.[396]

Patriotism: n. 2. is, fundamentally, a conviction that a particular country is the best in the world because you were born in it. [397]

Patriotism: n. 3. is the willingness to kill and be killed for trivial reasons.[398]

Patriotism: n. 4. is often an arbitrary veneration of real estate above principles.[399]

Patriotism: n. 5. is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.[400]

Patriotism: n. 6. a dreadful indignity whereby a soul is controlled by geography.[401]

Peace: n. 1. in international affairs, a period of cheating between two periods of fighting.[402]

Peace: n. 2. is that which cannot be learned by killing each other's children.[403]

Perfection: n. that which is achieved, not when there is nothing left to add, but when there is nothing left to take away.[404]

Perfume: n. a pungent liquid manufactured by the megalitre for the female population, serving to reinforce the suspicion that the dividing line between the fragrance of heavenly nectar and lavatory freshener is a narrow one.[405]

Perplexity: n. is the beginning of knowledge.[406]

Personal floatation device: n. an air filled jacket that saves your life should an aircraft land in water. Demonstrated with great zeal by the crew at the beginning of every flight, even if the flight path is over land only.[407]

Personality disorder: n. 1. eccentricity with true commitment.[408]

Personality disorder: n. 2. a guarantee against boredom.[409]

Pessimist: n. 1. someone who’s never happy unless he’s miserable.

Pessimist: n. 2. someone who wears a suspenders as well as a belt.

Pessimist: n. 3. one who would complain about the noise if opportunity knocked.

Philanthropist: n. one who selflessly funds vast sums of money to a charitable cause, without drawing attention to himself, but who fails sufficiently to then be recognized as a philanthropist and who then graciously accepts all the tax breaks without absolutely no fanfare at all.[410]

Philosopher: n. a fool who torments himself during life, to be spoken of when dead.

Philosophy: n. 1. a route of many roads leading from nowhere to nothing.[411]

Philosophy: n. 2. is a game with objectives and no rules. Mathematics is a game with rules and no objectives.

Photograph: n. a picture painted by the sun without instruction in art.[412]

Piracy: n. the seaborne plundering of gold, the kidnapping of wenches or the downloading of movies.[413]

Plagiarism: n. a literary coincidence where an honorable work is faced with a discreditable priority.[414]

Plastic surgeon: n. a modern high-priest of vanity who offers redemption via a scalpel blade.[415]

Platitude: n. an idea (a) that is admitted to be true by everyone, and (b) that is not true.[416]

Play: n. is work that you enjoy doing for nothing.[417]

Pleasure: n. that which is merely relief.[418]

Poetry: n. is that which communicates before it is understood.[419]

Policy: n. a magic veil that endows corporate bosses and politicians the appearance of acting with consistency, but that can conveniently change its colour like a chameleon when strategic double-talk is required.[420]

Politeness: n. the most acceptable hypocrisy.[421]

Political campaign: n. is the best circus ever heard of, with a mass baptism and a couple of hangings thrown in.[422]

Political correctness: n. 1. is the ceasing of cognitive abilities relating to rational analysis; often mistaken for religious fundamentalism and/or group think.[423]

Political correctness: n. 2. a loss of ability to confront reality in all its diversity. Diversity is instead replaced by an unanimity of meaninglessness.[424]

Political speech: n. what you say when you're not saying anything. See polite conversation. [425]

Politician: n. 1. a person with the ability to foretell what is going to happen tomorrow, next week, next month, next year, and has the ability afterward to explain why it didn't happen.[426]

Politician: n. 2. one who shakes your hand before elections and your confidence after.

Politician: n. 3. a politician is one who thinks of the next election. A statesman, of the next generation.[427]

Politician: n. 4. an ingenious criminal who covers his secret thieving with a pretence of open marauding.[428]

Politician: n. 5. an animal which can sit on a fence and yet keep both ears to the ground.[429]

Politics: n. 1. a strife of interests masquerading as a contest of principles. The conduct of public affairs for private advantage.[430]

Politics: n. 2. a pendulum whose swings between anarchy and tyranny are fueled by perpetually rejuvenated illusions.[431]

Politics: n. 3. is the art of looking for trouble, finding it everywhere, diagnosing it incorrectly and applying the wrong remedies.[432]

Politics: n. 4. is the entertainment branch of industry.[433]

Polygamy: n. an act of supreme sacrifice where a man risks his life to more than one mother-in-law.[434]

Pornography: n. 1. erotica is using a feather, pornography is using the whole chicken.[435]

Pornography: n. 2. the truest form of pornography is the depiction of beauty in war.[436]

Pornography: n. 3. is a satire on human pretensions.[437]

Poodle: n. a dog breed often paraded as a living emblem of its owner's willful lack of taste.

Pray: v. to ask that the laws of the universe be annulled on behalf of a single petitioner confessedly unworthy.[438]

President: n. one who assumes the position of running a country, who if he had any talent at running anything would be earning a lot more running a multinational business empire.[439]

Prescription: n. a physician's guess at what will best prolong the situation with least harm to the patient. [440]

Present: n. an illusory state between immediate past and immediate future.[441]

Preventive maintenance: n. a superstitious ritual in which an engineer is allowed to break things and display his inability to fix them in the forlorn hope that this will appease some unknown gods.[442]

Prig: n. a fellow who is always making you a present of his opinions.[443]

Prison: n. a governmental cost cutting measure, carried out by ostensibly rehabilitating serial killers and petty offenders all under the same roof.[444]

Problem: n. that which cannot be solved by the level of thinking that created it.[445]

Procrastination: n. 1. is the art of keeping up with yesterday.[446]

Procrastination: n. 2. the immediate minimization of excessive hastiness.[447]

Professional: n. 1. in personal ads, the most desirable sort of potential mate. 2. In the streets, a prostitute. 3. In the business world, see definition #2.[448]

Programming: n. (computing term) the art of adding bugs to an empty text file.[449]

Prohibitionist: n. is the sort of man one couldn't care to drink with, even if he drank.[450]

Prophecy: n. the art of selling one's credibility for future delivery.[451]

Proposal: n. a proposition that lost its nerve.

Prostitution: n. a business transaction where one's body is hired out at a much greater price than for what people commonly sell their souls for in a lifetime.[452]

Proverb: n. for a witticism of unknown attribution, the label 'proverb' is what replaces the label 'anon' after a sufficient number of centuries have elapsed.[453]

Public opinion: n. what people think people think.

Puritanism: n. is the haunting fear that someone, somewhere, may be happy. [454]

Q

Quagmire: n. is any situation more easily entered into than exited from.

Quantum particles: n. are the dreams that stuff is made of.

Quorum: n. a sufficient number of members of a group to have their own way. [455]

R

Radical: n. a man with both feet planted firmly in the air. [456]

Randomness: n. a hidden order, where the key to its decypherment is lost or unknown.[457]

Reality: n. 1. is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away. [458]

Reality: n. 2. is an illusion caused by the lack of drugs.

Reality: n. 3. that which very few people have the imagination for.[459]

Reconsider: v. to seek justification for a decision already made. [460]

Relationship: n. is that which is easiest with ten thousand people, the hardest is with one.[461]

Relative: n. a grotesque caricature of oneself.[462]

Religion: n. 1. is the sincere belief that a supreme being has the slightest bit of interest in supremely anthropocentric rituals.[463]

Religion: n. 2. is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich.[464]

Religion: n. 3. a spiritual straight-jacket.[465]

Remorse: n. regret that one waited so long to do it.[466]

Republican: n. 1. in the US, a creature that remains after all humanity is removed from a politician.[467]

Republican: n. 2. in the US, the party that says government doesn't work, and then they get elected and prove it.[468]

Research: n. if you steal from one author it's plagiarism; if you steal from many it's research. [469]

Resolute: adj. obstinate in an approved manner.[470]

Reproduction: n. the division of amoebas, the pollination of plants, the rutting of wildebeest, and the drunken frenzied Friday nights of humans.[471]

Revelry: n. the sound of people pretending to have a good time.

Romance: n. is that which begins with a prince kissing an angel, and ends with a bald headed man yawning at a fat woman.[472]

S

Safety belt: n. 1. a means for denying transplant patients the body parts they so desperately require.[473]

Safety belt: n. 2. on an aircraft, a device that extends your life by precisely two extra seconds as you plummet to the ground precariously strapped to an incinerated piece of fuselage.[474]

Saint: n. a dead sinner revised and edited.[475]

Satanist: n. one who defeats himself by displaying all the noble qualities of loyalty, love, truth, and charity towards fellow satanic brothers.[476]

Satire: n. an obsolete kind of literary composition in which the vices and follies of the author's enemies were expounded with imperfect tenderness.[477]

Scandal: n. that which ruins an unpopular official and causes a popular one to enjoy an even higher approval rating.[478]

Schizophrenia: n. a healthy response to a sick society.[479]

Science: n. 1. is the belief in the ignorance of experts.[480]

Science: n. 2. is organized common sense where many a beautiful theory was killed by an ugly fact. [481]

Science: n. 3. is the road to pertinent answers, found by asking impertinent questions. [482]

Science: n. 4. is that in which authority of thousands of opinions is not worth as much as one tiny spark of reason in an individual man.[483]

Science fiction: n. fantasy is the impossible made probable. Science Fiction is the improbable made possible.[484]

Secret: n. something you tell to only one person at a time.

Self: n. is that which is harder to cheat than the rest of the world.[485]

Selfish: adj. devoid of consideration for the selfishness of others.[486]

Selfishness: n. is not living as one wishes to live, it is asking others to live as one wishes to live.[487]

Self-respect: n. is the secure feeling that no one, as yet, is suspicious.[488]

Semicolon: n. a transvestite hermaphrodite representing absolutely nothing. All it does is show you've been to college.[489]

Seriousness: n. seriousness is the only refuge of the shallow.[490]

Seethe: v. to quietly reflect that may are better than you at everything.

Sex: n. 1. is one of the most beautiful, natural, wholesome things that money can buy.[491]

Sex: n. 2. a form of Russian roulette that can result in producing a saint or a dictator.[492]

Shin: n. a device for finding furniture in the dark.[493]

Silence: n. 1. is the perfect expression of scorn.[494]

Silence: n. 2. the period before a child is born and after it goes to college.

Silence: n. 3. is the voice of complicity.

Skeleton: n. a bunch of bones with the person scraped off.

Skeptic: n. a true believer in another set of beliefs.[495]

Sloth: n. a condition condemned by those without the imagination to create free time.[496]

Socialism: n. is a philosophy of failure, the creed of ignorance, and the gospel of envy, its inherent virtue is the equal sharing of misery.[497]

Song: n. 1. the licensed medium for bawling in public things too silly or sacred to be uttered in ordinary speech. [498]

Song: n. 2. anything that is too stupid to be spoken.[499]

Software bug: n. a random feature embedded in a perfectly good piece of software.

Speed dating: n. an opportunity to get over all your disappointments at one.

Sperm: n. a champion swimmer that disappointingly loses all its ability after it turns into a human.[500]

Sperm donor: n. an apathetic rapist who nevertheless achieves his goal of gratuitously filling the genetic pool as widely as possible with his genes.[501]

Standard: adj. manufactured by the biggest supplier.[502]

Star: n. a performer who makes more than his or her agent.[503]

Statesman: n. a politician who has been dead ten or fifteen years.[504]

Statistician: n. 1. a man who believes figures don't lie, but admits that under analysis some of them won't stand up either.[505]

Statistician: n. 2. is someone who is good with numbers, but lacks the personality to be an accountant.

Statistics: n. is the science of producing unreliable facts from reliable figures.[506]

Strategy: n. Tactics is knowing what to do when there is something to do. Strategy is knowing what to do when there is nothing to do.[507]

Subtlety: n. the art of saying what you think and getting out of the way before it is understood.

Success: n. 1. is the one unpardonable sin against one's fellows.[508]

Success: n. 2. is the ability to go from one failure to another with no loss of enthusiasm.[509]

Success: n. 3. is when a man makes more money than his wife can spend.[510]

Suicide: n. is the sincerest form of self-criticism.

Sun: n. nature’s nuclear fusion reactor that is at an arguably safe distance from Earth; it generously affords us 5000 times our current world energy needs and will run reliably over the next billion years with zero downtime.[511]

Sunday school: n. is a prison in which children do penance for the evil conscience of their parents.[512]

Superego: n. an advanced state of self-hood reached only by car park attendants and doctors' receptionists.

Superglue: n. an adhesive of unparalleled strength. Excellent for gluing fingers together and utterly useless for all else.[513]

Superstition: n. 1. is a premature explanation that overstays its time. [514]

Superstition: n. 2. is a belief which leaves no place for doubt. [515]

Sustainable growth: n. a cheeky little oxymoron suggesting the idea of economic growth that is sustainable over vast ecological time scales; where in practice this is often the time period required to just make it through to the next election. [516]

Strategists: n. a group of people who are getting their act together.

Strike: n. industrial inaction.

Sweater n. a garment worn by a child when its mother feels chilly.

Sympathy: n. is what one woman offers another in exchange for the juicy details.

System administrator: n. (computing term) a person whose job it is to do everything that isn't his job. [517]

System update: n. (computing term) a quick method of trashing all of your software.

T

Tabloid: n. a compact journal filled with tall tales of celebrity infidelities, woes, gaffes, feuds and diseases, so as to minimize mass resentment of their undeserved fame and wealth.

Talk show: n. an opportunity for people to confess to millions of viewers what they would be ashamed to admit to their next-door neighbors.[518]

Tax break: n. a desperate attempt at buying votes.[519]

Teacher: n. a person who talks to himself for a living; as opposed to a lunatic, who talks to himself for fun.

Team player: n. the type of cooperative, self-effacing employee beloved by corporations that promote egotists to the top positions.[520]

Tears: n. the hydraulic force by which masculine will-power is defeated by feminine water power.

Technology: n. 1. is a way of organizing the universe so that man doesn't have to experience it.[521]

Technology: n. 2. the means by which today's forward-looking companies produce tomorrow's obsolete gadgets.[522]

Technophilia: n. the father of invention.

Teleconference: n. a way of holding an international meeting without having to smell the French.[523]

Telephone plan: n. a form of indentured slavery , where to buy one's freedom from a telephone company comes at a high cost.[524]

Television: n. 1. a more socially acceptable synonym of myopovision.[525]

Television: n. 2. a tiresome advertising portal punctuated with an occasional movie of interest.[526]

Temptation: n. that which goes away when you yield to it.[527]

Temptation: n. is a woman's weapon and man's excuse.[528]

Temptation: n. is an irresistible force at work on a movable body.[529]

Thief: n. a petty thief is one you hang, but a truly great thief is one you appoint to public office.[530]

Theology: n. 1. is searching in a dark cellar at midnight for a black cat that isn't there. [531]

Theology: n. 2. is the recitation of the incomprehensible by the unspeakable to pick the pockets of the unthinking.[532]

Theory: n. (scientific term) is the first term in the Taylor series of practice. [533]

Thinking: n. a rearrangement of one's prejudices.[534]

Time: n. 1. is what stops everything from happening all at once.[535]

Time: n. 2. is that which wounds all heels.[536]

Time capsule: n. a collection of objects gathered to show our descendants how tasteless and dim-witted we were.

Timetable: n. a list that sets out all the times when a train will definitely not be departing on any particular day.

Tolerance: n. 1. is the virtue of the man without convictions.[537]

Tolerance: n. 2. the respect of another fellow's religion, but only in the sense and to the extent that we respect his theory that his wife is beautiful and his children smart.[538]

Tomorrow: n. one of the greatest labour saving devices of today.

Transparency: n. refers to the open flow of information between management and the workers. Now done with such zeal that the workers have no time to read the resulting barrage of emails.[539]

Trial: n. a contest to see who can afford the cleverest lawyer.[540]

Truth: n. 1. is that which begins as a blasphemy.[541]

Truth: n. 2. is that which has only to pass through a few persons to become fiction.[542]

Tyrant: n. a politician who is no longer concealing his ambitions and intentions.

U

UFO: n. a result of the known irrational characteristics of terrestrial intelligence than of the unknown rational efforts of extra-terrestrial intelligence.[543]

Ugliness: n. 1. a gift of the gods to certain women, entailing virtue without humility. [544]

Ugliness: n. 2. is the guardian of women. [545]

Uncertainty: n. is the thing that makes knowledge interesting.[546]

Unemployed: n. between jobs.

Universal: n. does not fit anything properly.

University: n. is what a college becomes when the faculty loses interest in students.[547]

University management: n. a group of failed academics.[548]

Urinal: n. the one place where all men are peers. [549]

User friendly: n. of or pertaining to any feature, device or concept that makes perfect sense to a programmer.

Utimatum: n. in diplomacy, a last demand before resorting to concessions. [550]

V

Vacation: n. a perilous journey usually to a far flung destination, transported in a large flying metal tube with wings. Designed to provide respite and refreshment from one's daily toil, but invariably results in jet lag, dysentery, and extra overtime to pay for the said pleasure.[551]

Vegetarian: n. 1. an old tribal word for 'bad hunter.'

Vegetarian: n. 2. a herbivorous individual with Buddhist tendencies. One who rejects the ghoulish concept of forking animal remains down the gullet, preferring to dine upon the corpses of plants and their detachable reproductive organs (popularly known as 'fruit').

Veneer: n. a thin, finely finished exterior that effectively conceals the underlying substance; e.g., a mortician's smile or the civility that prevails at a Hollywood party.

Viagra: n. a tiny blue pill that stiffens one's resolve to fight against junk email.[552]

Victim: n. one who colludes with his own downfall.[553]

Victory: n. that which goes to the player who makes the next-to-last mistake.[554]

Video camera: n. an audiovisual recording device thrust into the hands of the public so that future social historians might develop migraines looking at our school plays, pet tricks, weddings, and christenings.

Video game: n. 1. an electronic form of opium, consumed by stony-eyed young addicts either at home or in dark communal dens, where their families occasionally must venture to retrieve them.

Video game: n. 2. that which increases a child's imagination if the game involves Italian plumbers knocking out sentient turtles whilst consuming magic mushrooms and which increases retardation if a child repeatedly accesses WWII simulations.[555]

W

War: n. 1. is where truth is the first casualty.[556]

War: n. 2. is young men dying and old men talking.[557]

War: n. 3. is an effort to make the laws of God and nature take sides with one party.[558]

War: n. 4. a massacre of people who don't know each other for the profit of people who know each other but don't massacre each other.[559]

War: n. 5. a cowardly escape from the problems of peace.[560]

War: n. 6. a device for maintaining peace between nations, which is at least as sustainable as beating one's wife into maintaining a cordial bedroom relationship.[561]

War: n. 7. the forced acquisition of what one wants from what another has. See rape. [562]

War: n. 8. is where the object is not to die for your country, but to make the other bastard die for his.[563]

War: n. 9. is that which brings peace, but only to its victims.[564]

War: n. 10. is where fathers bury their sons; as opposed to peace where sons bury their fathers.[565]

War: n. 11. is waged by the rich and it is the poor who die.[566]

War: n. 12. a device whereby chaos amplifies religious and ideological differences, numbing the senses, thereby allowing corporate greed to painlessly thrust through the back door and even seem like pleasure.[567]

War: n. 13. a form of slave labour, where men work themselves to death for the lords of the military-industrial complex in the faint hope they may someday buy their freedom.[568]

War: n. 14. is menstruation envy.

War hero: n. one who sacrificed his life to failed politicians.[569]

Wealth: n. any income that is at least $100 more a year than the income of one's wife's sister's husband.[570]

Wedding: n. similar to a funeral except that you get to smell your own flowers.[571]

Wedding ring: n. 1. a subtle signal to single admirers that they should abandon all hope, since the wearer already has.

Wedding ring: n. 2. the world's smallest handcuffs.

Welfare: n. a public safety net strung up to catch the casualties of the free market system and keep them tangled in the webbing for generations.

Whisky: n. the amber of the gods administered in 700ml installments.[572]

Wickedictionary: n. the product of an unholy alliance between Ambrose Bierce and Derek Abbott resulting in an obscene collection of twisted definitions that perversely expose the truth.[573]

Wickedness: n. is to create a public scandal, as opposed to sinning in private which is no sin at all.[574]

Wife: n. a woman who has ceased to be your girlfriend and resents anyone attempting to fill the vacancy.[575]

Wikipedia: n. the world's most accurate encyclopedia [citation needed].[576]

Windows 95: n. a 32-bit patch to a 16-bit GUI for an 8-bit operating system written for a 4-bit processor by a 2-bit company that can't stand one bit of competition.[577]

Wine: n. is light held together by moisture.[578]

Wisdom: n. 1. is the abstract of the past, but beauty is the promise of the future.[579]

Wisdom: n. 2. the ability to recognize a mistake when you make it again.

Wit: n. is educated insolence.[580]

Woman: n. is a disease. An ugly woman is a disease of the stomach, a handsome woman a disease of the head.[581]

Women: n. 1. those which have hydrofluoric acid bottled up inside. [582]

Women: n. 2. are those that make highs higher and the lows more frequent.[583]

Women: n. 3. are those that don't want to hear what you think. Women want to hear what they think - in a deeper voice.[584]

Work: n. is the curse of the drinking classes.[585]

Wrinkles: n. character lines on other people.

Wristwatch: n. a fashion accessory with a clock in the middle, its status value being roughly proportional to the illegibility of the dial.

X

X-ray: n. a diagnostic tool used to detect existing cancerous growths and create new ones for future examinations to reveal.

Y

Yawn: n. an honest opinion openly expressed.

Yesterday: n. 1. is but today's memory, and tomorrow is today's dream.[586]

Yesterday: n. 2. is what tomorrow will be in two days time.

Youth: n. 1. a pristine condition worshiped by menopausal women in sweatsuits and shrinking men with chestnut-brown toupees, while those who actually possess it are frequently too shallow or despondent to appreciate it.[587]

Youth: n. 2. an ideal state, if only it came a little later in life.[588]

Z

Zeal: n. 1. a certain nervous disorder afflicting the young and inexperienced. A passion that goes before a sprawl.[589]

Zeal: n. 2. is a volcano, the peak of which the grass of indecisiveness does not grow. [590]

Zoo: n. a pleasant and instructive wildlife park, lately denounced for depriving animals of their right to starve or be eaten alive in their natural habitats.[591]

References

  1. Albert Camus
  2. Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  3. Derek Abbott, 2010
  4. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by Julian O'Shea, 2009
  5. Evan Esar, but looks like he ripped it from Ambrose Bierce's “Admiration, n. Our polite recognition of another's resemblance to ourselves.”
  6. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by Jacob Irving, 2010
  7. H. L. Mencken
  8. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by Derek Abbott, 2010
  9. George Orwell
  10. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by Cheryl Rae, 2010
  11. Derek Abbott
  12. Derek Abbott, 2010
  13. Dylan Thomas
  14. Groucho Marx
  15. Oscar Wilde, Phrases and Philosophies for the use of the Young (1894)
  16. Steven Wright
  17. Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  18. Evan Esar
  19. Winston Churchill
  20. Chambers Gigglossary
  21. H. L. Mencken
  22. Rita Mae Brown
  23. Kahlil Gibran
  24. Andre Gide
  25. Theodor Adorno
  26. Andy Warhol
  27. Jose Ortega y Gasset
  28. George Bernard Shaw, The Rejected Statement, Pt. I
  29. Adapted from Willy Russell's play Educating Rita
  30. Derek Abbott, 2010
  31. Derek Abbott
  32. Rick Bayan
  33. Adapted from James Duffecy
  34. Joseph Addison
  35. Derek Abbott
  36. Donald Morgan
  37. Francis Thompson
  38. Derek Abbott
  39. Adapted from Woody Allen
  40. A. Smith quoted in the Chambers Gigglossary
  41. H. L. Mencken
  42. A. Cole quoted in the Chambers Gigglossary
  43. N. Jones quoted in the Chambers Gigglossary
  44. Derek Abbott, 2010
  45. Mark Twain, attributed.
  46. Derek Abbott, 2010
  47. N. Kelly quoted in the Chambers Gigglossary
  48. Adapted from Rabindranath Tagore
  49. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by R, 2010
  50. Jose Ortega y Gasset
  51. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by Julian O'Shea, 2009
  52. Steven Wright
  53. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by Julian O'Shea, 2009
  54. Isham Research
  55. Rick Bayan
  56. Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  57. Gian Vincenzo Gravina
  58. Bert Leston Taylor
  59. Rick Bayan
  60. Derek Abbott, 2010
  61. Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  62. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by Joshua Arnold-Foster, 2009
  63. Adapted from Yes Minister
  64. Derek Abbott, 2010
  65. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by David Olney, 2010
  66. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by Karen Rossiter, 2010
  67. Derek Abbott, 2010
  68. John Norris
  69. K.R.
  70. K.R.
  71. Rick Bayan
  72. H. L. Mencken, A Mencken Chrestomathy (1949)
  73. Rick Bayan
  74. Derek Abbott, 2010
  75. Derek Abbott, 2010
  76. Granville Hicks
  77. George Bernard Shaw, The Irrational Knot (1905)
  78. Rick Bayan
  79. Derek Abbott
  80. Mark Twain
  81. Derek Abbott, 2010
  82. David Cook quoted in the Chambers Gigglossary
  83. Adapted from George Carlin
  84. Peter Ustinov
  85. Warren Keyes quoted in the Chambers Gigglossary
  86. Richard Harkness
  87. Sir Barnett Cocks
  88. Adapted from H. L. Mencken
  89. Albert Einstein
  90. Warwick Annear quoted in the Chambers Gigglossary
  91. Derek Abbott, 2010
  92. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by Lloyd Irving, 2010
  93. Steven Wright
  94. R. McCarthy quoted in the Chambers Gigglossary
  95. Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  96. H. L. Mencken, A Mencken Chrestomathy (1949)
  97. Evan Esar
  98. Adapted from Shakespeare, Hamlet Scene I
  99. Leo Rosten
  100. Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  101. Derek Abbott, 2010
  102. Derek Abbott, 2010
  103. Derek Abbott, 2010
  104. Oscar Wide
  105. George Bernard Shaw
  106. Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  107. Rick Bayan
  108. Adapted from Scott Adams
  109. Derek Abbott, 2010
  110. J. A. Coleman quoted in the Chambers Gigglossary
  111. Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  112. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by Lloyd Irving, 2010
  113. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by Cheryl Rae, 2010
  114. Albert Einstein
  115. Scott Adams
  116. Adapted from Peter Ustinov
  117. Henry Louis Mencken
  118. Adapted from George Carlin
  119. Rick Bayan
  120. Based on Calvin & Hobbes
  121. Rick Bayan
  122. H. L. Mencken, attributed.
  123. From the TV show, Yes Minister.
  124. Oscar Wilde
  125. Rick Bayan
  126. Edgar A. Shoaff
  127. Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  128. Derek Abbott
  129. George Bernard Shaw
  130. Elbert Hubbard
  131. George Carlin
  132. Adapted from Edsger Dijkstra
  133. Adapted from Yes Minister.
  134. H. L. Mencken, A Mencken Chrestomathy (1949)
  135. H. L. Mencken, attributed.
  136. H. L. Mencken, attributed.
  137. Gore Vidal
  138. E. B. White
  139. Leo Szilard, The Voice of the Dolphins: And Other Stories (1961).
  140. Iain Leonard quoted in the Chambers Gigglossary
  141. Derek Abbott, 2010
  142. Adapted from Irving Kristol
  143. Adapted from Rick Bayan
  144. Adapted from Elayne Boosler
  145. Derek Abbott, 2010
  146. Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  147. Caskie Stinnett
  148. Rita Mae Brown
  149. Robin Williams
  150. Derek Abbott, 2010
  151. Adapted from Rabindranath Tagore
  152. Rick Bayan
  153. Kahlil Gibran
  154. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
  155. Derek Abbott, 2009
  156. Peter Ustinov
  157. Derek Abbott, 2010
  158. Nigel Drury quoted in the Chambers Gigglossary
  159. Adapted from H. L. Mencken
  160. Derek Abbott, Definition created for Wickedictionary, (24 December 2009)
  161. Laurence J. Peter
  162. Rick Bayan
  163. Albert Einstein
  164. Laurence J. Peter
  165. Ambrose Bierce
  166. Derek Abbott, 2010
  167. Bellamy Brooks
  168. Derek Abbott, 2010
  169. Derek Abbott, 2009
  170. H. L. Mencken
  171. H. L. Mencken
  172. George Carlin
  173. Derek Abbott, 2010
  174. Derek Abbott, 2010
  175. Isham Research
  176. Derek Abbott
  177. Elbert Hubbard
  178. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by R, 2010
  179. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by Lloyd Irving, 2010
  180. Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  181. Kahlil Gibran
  182. Derek Abbott, 2009
  183. Oscar Wilde, Lady Windermere's Fan (1892)
  184. Patrick Hoyte quoted in the Chambers Gigglossary
  185. Steven Wright
  186. Derek Abbott
  187. Steven Weinberg
  188. Edwin Meese
  189. Attributed to Ernst Mach
  190. Derek Abbott, 2010
  191. Rick Bayan
  192. H. L. Mencken, Prejudices (1922)
  193. Kahlil Gibran
  194. Derek Abbott
  195. Friedrich Nietzsche
  196. Oscar Wilde
  197. Neil Jones quoted in the Chambers Gigglossary
  198. Bill Cosby
  199. Adapted from Desmond Morris
  200. Derek Abbott
  201. Rush Limbaugh
  202. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by Karen Rossiter, 2009
  203. Robert W. Sarnoff
  204. Douglas Adams
  205. Fran Lebowitz
  206. Adapted from H. L. Mencken
  207. Adapted from Scott Adams
  208. Derek Abbott, 2010
  209. Rick Bayan
  210. Rick Bayan
  211. Elbert Hubbard
  212. Adapted from Peter Ustinov
  213. Tobias Reynolds quoted in the Chambers Gigglossary
  214. Derek Abbott, 2009
  215. Derek Abbott, 2010
  216. Derek Abbott, 2010
  217. Jim Auster
  218. Isham Research
  219. Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  220. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by Derek Abbott, 2010
  221. Lana Turner
  222. Derek Abbott, 2010
  223. Steve Wylie quoted in the Chambers Gigglossary
  224. Rita Mae Brown, Alma Mater (2001)
  225. Derek Abbott, 2010
  226. Derek Abbott
  227. John Norris
  228. Oscar Wilde
  229. Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  230. Derek Abbott
  231. Derek Abbott, 2010
  232. Cynical definitions, by HumourHub
  233. Cynical definitions, by HumourHub
  234. George Bernard Shaw, Misalliance (1910)
  235. Peter Ustinov
  236. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by Anon, 2010
  237. Steve Wright
  238. Joss Whedon, Serenity.
  239. Cynical definitions, by HumourHub
  240. Rick Bayan
  241. H. L. Mencken
  242. Napoleon
  243. Adapted from George Orwell
  244. Alexis de Tocqueville, Old Regime, p. 88, 1856
  245. Derek Abbott
  246. Alfred Nobel
  247. Derek Abbott, 2010
  248. Adapted from George Bernard Shaw, You Never Can Tell, Act II
  249. Derek Abbott
  250. Adapted from Douglas Adams
  251. Russ Abbott
  252. Adapted from Scott Adams
  253. Cynical definitions, by HumourHub
  254. Kurt Vonnegut
  255. Kurt Vonnegut
  256. Proverb
  257. Cynical definitions, by HumourHub
  258. Anon quoted in the Chambers Gigglossary
  259. Cynical definitions, by HumourHub
  260. James R. Newman
  261. Adapted from Jose Ortega y Gasset
  262. Adapted from H. L. Mencken
  263. Adapted from M. King Hubbert
  264. Derek Abbott (2009)
  265. Charles Caleb Colton
  266. H. L. Mencken
  267. Adapted from Douglas Adams
  268. Albert Einstein
  269. Adapted from H. L. Mencken
  270. Derek Abbott, 2010
  271. Derek Abbott, 2010
  272. Rita Mae Brown, Sudden Death (1983)
  273. Philip K. Dick, The Man in the High Castle (1962)
  274. Cynical Definitions, by HumourHub
  275. K. R., who wishes to remain anonymous
  276. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by Julian O'Shea, 2009
  277. Rita Mae Brown
  278. Cynical Definitions, by HumourHub
  279. Evan Esar
  280. Derek Abbott, 2010
  281. H. L. Mencken
  282. Cynical definitions, by HumourHub
  283. H. L. Mencken, A Mencken Chrestomathy (1949)
  284. Rick Bayan
  285. Derek Abbott, Definition created for Wickedictionary, (24 December 2009)
  286. Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  287. George Carlin
  288. Lily Tomlin
  289. William S. Burroughs
  290. Anatole France, The Red Lily Ch. 7, (1894)
  291. H. L. Mencken, A Mencken Chrestomathy (1949)
  292. Rick Bayan
  293. Adapted from Leo Kessler
  294. H. L. Mencken
  295. Derek Abbott, 2009
  296. George Orwell
  297. From the TV show, Yes Minister.
  298. Adapted from, Neil Gaiman, Death Talks About Life.
  299. Adapted from, "Life is hard. After all, it kills you." Katharine Hepburn
  300. John W. Gardner
  301. Anon
  302. Jose Ortega y Gasset
  303. H. L. Mencken
  304. Derek Abbott, 2010
  305. Kurt Vonnegut, Bluebeard (1987)
  306. Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  307. Derek Abbott, Definition created for Wickedictionary, (24 December 2009)
  308. Derek Abbott, Definition created for Wickedictionary, 2010
  309. H. L. Mencken, attributed.
  310. H. L. Mencken, attributed.
  311. Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  312. Derek Abbott, 2010
  313. Adapted from Mae West
  314. H. L. Mencken
  315. Derek Abbott, 2010
  316. Adapted from Jean Cocteau
  317. Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  318. Isham Research
  319. Rick Bayan
  320. Isham Research
  321. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by Joshua Arnold-Foster, 2009
  322. Francois de La Rochefoucauld
  323. George Bernard Shaw
  324. Alan King
  325. Adapted from Helen Rowland
  326. Groucho Marx
  327. Derek Abbott, 2010
  328. Rick Bayan
  329. George Bernard Shaw, The Devil's Disciple, Act II
  330. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by Lloyd Irving, 2010
  331. Derek Abbott, 2009
  332. Paul Erdos
  333. Derek Abbott, 2010
  334. Derek Abbott, 2010
  335. Alfred North Whitehead
  336. David Hilbert
  337. Derek Abbott, 2010
  338. Adapted from Frank Yerby
  339. F. H. Bradley
  340. Derek Abbott, 2010
  341. Derek Abbott, Definition created for Wickedictionary, (24 December 2009)
  342. Groucho Marx
  343. Groucho Marx
  344. Derek Abbott, 2010
  345. Derek Abbott, 2010
  346. H. L. Mencken, A Mencken Chrestomathy (1949)
  347. Rick Bayan
  348. Derek Abbott, 2010
  349. Adapted from H. L. Mencken
  350. Oscar Wilde
  351. H. G. Wells
  352. H. L. Mencken
  353. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by Lloyd Irving, 2010
  354. Julian O'Shea
  355. K. R., who wishes to remain anonymous
  356. K. R., who wishes to remain anonymous
  357. Adapted from Voltaire in Rights (1771).
  358. Adapted from, Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  359. William Ralph Inge
  360. George Orwell
  361. Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  362. Derek Abbott, 2010
  363. Douglas Adams
  364. Derek Abbott, 2010
  365. H. L. Mencken, A Mencken Chrestomathy (1949)
  366. Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  367. Rita Mae Brown, Venus Envy (1993)
  368. Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  369. Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  370. Derek Abbott.
  371. Dexter Gordon
  372. Derek Abbott
  373. Samuel Johnson
  374. Derek Abbott, 2010
  375. Khalil Gibran
  376. HumourHub
  377. HumourHub
  378. Adapted from John Barrymore
  379. Oliver Wendell Holmes
  380. Billy Joel
  381. Rick Bayan
  382. John W. Gardner
  383. Albert Meltzer
  384. Adapted from Kin Hubbard
  385. Don Marquis
  386. Derek Abbott, 2009
  387. Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  388. HumourHub
  389. George Orwell, 1984
  390. Adapted from Clarence Darrow
  391. Richard Feynman
  392. Søren Kierkegaard
  393. Isham research
  394. Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  395. Edward Abbey
  396. Oscar Wilde.
  397. George Bernard Shaw, The World (1893)
  398. Bertrand Russell
  399. George Jean Nathan
  400. Mark Twain
  401. Adapted from George Santaya
  402. Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  403. Adapted from Jimmy Carter
  404. Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
  405. Derek Abbott, 2010
  406. Khalil Gibran
  407. Derek Abbott, 2010
  408. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by Derek Abbott, 2010
  409. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by Derek Abbott, 2010
  410. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by Derek Abbott, 2010
  411. Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  412. Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  413. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by Adam Darius Mistry, 2010
  414. Adapted from, Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  415. Derek Abbott
  416. H. L. Mencken
  417. Evan Esar
  418. Adapted from William S. Burrows
  419. Adapted from T. S. Elliot
  420. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by Derek Abbott, 2010
  421. Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  422. H. L. Mencken
  423. K.R., who wishes to remain anonymous
  424. K.R., who wishes to remain anonymous
  425. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by Lloyd Irving, 2010
  426. Winston Churchill
  427. Adapted from James Freeman Clarke
  428. Adapted from Ambrose Bierce
  429. H. L. Mencken
  430. Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  431. Albert Einstein, The Human Side (1954)
  432. Groucho Marx
  433. Frank Zappa
  434. Derek Abbott, 2009
  435. Isabel Allende
  436. Derek Abbott, 2009
  437. Angela Carter
  438. Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  439. Derek Abbott, 2010
  440. Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  441. Derek Abbott, 2009
  442. Isham Research
  443. George Eliot
  444. Derek Abbott, 2010
  445. Adapted from Albert Einstein
  446. George Carlin
  447. Derek Abbott, 2010
  448. Rick Bayan
  449. Louis Srygley
  450. H. L. Mencken
  451. Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  452. Derek Abbott
  453. Derek Abbott
  454. H. L. Mencken, A Book of Burlesques (1916)
  455. Adapted from Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  456. Franklin Delano Roosevelt
  457. Derek Abbott, 2010
  458. Philip K. Dick, How To Build A Universe That Doesn't Fall Apart Two Days Later (1978)
  459. Adapted from Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
  460. Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  461. Adapted from Joan Baez
  462. Adapted from H. L. Mencken
  463. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by James Chappell, 2009
  464. Napoleon Bonaparte
  465. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by Anonymous, 2010
  466. H. L. Mencken, A Mencken Chrestomathy (1949)
  467. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by Ron Berti, 2009
  468. P. J. O'Rourke
  469. Wilson Mizner
  470. Adapted from Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  471. Derek Abbott, 2010
  472. Evan Esar
  473. Derek Abbott, 2010
  474. Derek Abbott, 2010
  475. Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  476. Derek Abbott, 2010
  477. Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  478. Rick Bayan
  479. From the TV show: The Bill, and they probably ripped off the idea from Krishnamurti's "It is no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society."
  480. Richard Feynman
  481. Thomas Huxley
  482. Adapted from Jacob Bronowski
  483. Galileo Galilei, 1612
  484. Rod Sterling
  485. George Bernard Shaw
  486. Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  487. Oscar Wilde, The Soul of Man Under Socialism (1895)
  488. H. L. Mencken, A Mencken Chrestomathy (1949)
  489. Kurt Vonnegut
  490. Oscar Wilde
  491. Tom Clancy
  492. Derek Abbott, 2010
  493. Steven Wright
  494. George Bernard Shaw, Back to Methuselah (1921)
  495. Phillip E. Johnson
  496. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by Lloyd Irving, 2010
  497. Winston Churchill
  498. Oliver Herford
  499. Voltaire
  500. Derek Abbott, 2010
  501. Derek Abbott, 2010
  502. Isham Research
  503. Rick Bayan
  504. Harry S. Truman
  505. Evan Esar
  506. Evan Esar
  507. Savielly Tartakower
  508. Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  509. Winston Churchill
  510. Adapted from Lana Turner
  511. Derek Abbott, 2010
  512. H. L. Mencken
  513. Derek Abbott, 2010
  514. George Iles
  515. José Bergamín
  516. Derek Abbott, The Wickedictionary, (2009).
  517. Alan Silverstein
  518. Rick Bayan
  519. Derek Abbott, 2010
  520. Rick Bayan
  521. Max Frisch
  522. Rick Bayan
  523. Isham Research
  524. Derek Abbott, 2010
  525. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by Eran Binebaum, 2010
  526. Derek Abbott, 2010
  527. Adapted from Oscar Wilde
  528. H. L. Mencken
  529. H. L. Mencken
  530. Adapted from Aesop
  531. Robert A. Heinlein
  532. Robert Anton Wilson
  533. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by Tom Cover, 2010
  534. Adapted from William James
  535. John Wheeler
  536. Groucho Marx
  537. Gilbert Keith Chesterton
  538. Adapted from H. L. Menecken
  539. Derek Abbott, 2010
  540. Derek Abbott, 2010
  541. George Bernard Shaw
  542. Evan Esar
  543. Richard Feynman
  544. Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  545. Traditional Hebrew adage
  546. Derek Abbott, 2010
  547. John Ciardi
  548. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by Derek Abbott, 2010
  549. HumourHub
  550. Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  551. Derek Abbott, 2010
  552. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by Derek Abbott, 2010
  553. Ian McEwin
  554. Savielly Grigorievitch Tartakower
  555. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by Adam Darius Mistry, 2010
  556. Adapted from Aeschylus
  557. From the film Troy (2004).
  558. Henry David Thoreau
  559. Paul Valery
  560. Thomas Mann
  561. Derek Abbott, 2010
  562. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by Adam Darius Mistry, 2010
  563. George Patton
  564. Adapted from Leonid S. Sukhorukov in All About Everything (2005)
  565. Adapted from Heroditus
  566. Adapted from Jean-Paul Sartre
  567. Derek Abbott, 2010
  568. Derek Abbott, 2010
  569. Derek Abbott, 2010
  570. H. L. Mencken, A Mencken Chrestomathy (1949)
  571. Adapted from Grace Hansen
  572. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by Lloyd Irving, 2010
  573. Derek Abbott
  574. Adapted from Molière in Tartuffe (1664)
  575. Dick Chinnery quoted in Chambers Gigglossary
  576. Contributed specially for The Wickedictionary by Julian O'Shea, 2009
  577. Isham Research
  578. Galileo Galilei
  579. Oliver Wendell Holmes
  580. Aristotle
  581. Traditional English proverb
  582. Kurt Vonnegut
  583. Friedrich Nietzsche
  584. Bill Cosby
  585. Oscar Wilde
  586. Khalil Gibran
  587. Rick Bayan
  588. Adapted from Herbert Henry Asquit
  589. Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
  590. Khalil Gibran
  591. Rick Bayan

Back