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I'm Avery and I'm the shit.
Screen name: Avenator3000
I'm a Senior at NPHS.
Music is awesome.
Food is awesome.
Life is awesome.
I have found an amazing girl who I care for very much. That's all there is to it.
Oh, also, I've decided I'm going to be very rich. Don't worry, I'll remember many of you when I'm up there. Suck ups are welcome....
For the term "lol"
Lol is a shade of its former self; it no longer means "laughing out loud", but generally is now used as a placeholder for something that the person could have said, but either decided it wasn't worth it or just didn't want to put the time/effort into thinking of a response. Lol can be used in every situation, and can be an answer to everything. Example: "Sally: "I'm going to the mall." Ben: Lol."" In this case, Sally is simply stating that she wishes to go to the mall, which is certainly not funny at all. Ben has decided to say "lol" most likely because he simply does not care, or doesn't want to think of a more fitting response. In the present day, one does not even have to read a conversation one is having. After hearing the Oh-So-Familiar AIM sound that you have a messge, you simply open it up, type "lol" and go back to your most recently pirated movie, song or video game. Lol is dead, and everyone knows it. This is why when something is genuinely funny, the person responding will generally type "LOL" in capitals in order to emphasize the acronym. In the end, "lol or Lol" is simply something said when you just don't give a damn, and "LOL" is the new "lol." This hypothesis of mine of course completly excludes acronyms such as "ROFL" or "LMAO", caps or otherwise. Usually it is closer to sincerity than "Lol" ever could hope to be.
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