"Stan" added as a word in Oxford English Dictionary (camelface z lost)

Cabbage Patch

The Media scene in V is for Vendetta is the clue
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How it works:

1. Em made the song, Nas used it as both a verb and a noun - Em gets credit

2. Nas made a song, Em used it as both a verb and a noun - Em gets credit

3. Nas made a song, Jayz used it as both a verb and a noun, a Jew patents/copyrights the word - the Jew gets credit.


A black will never be credited unless whites don't want it. This applies retroactively and in future tenses. The end.
 

luckyse7enz

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No, it's an adjective describing an obsessed person.

You're a fan, a phony, a fake, a p*ssy, a Stan...all adjectives.

LOL, no. :laugh:

A noun is a person, place, thing, or idea. :tu:

An adjective describes a noun. :tu:

"This is a red car."

"Red" is the adjective that describes the noun "car". :tu:

Just as you say: a Stan is an obsessed person.

A person is a noun.

You aren't a Stan person.

You're just a Stan.

Got me working on my day off. :therethere:

Sometimes, we use it as a verb, when we describe someone that's obsessing over something.

"You stan Drake." (verb)

"You are a Kendrick stan." (noun)
 
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