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Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word woosie.
Examples
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Really, in the context of human history, this barely qualifies as doping--it's "woosie" cheating.
Weight of the World: Shouldering Burdens, Rationalizing Decisions BikeSnobNYC 2010
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Anyway, in a certain sense has not this modern "woosie" doping infiltrated nearly every aspect of life?
Weight of the World: Shouldering Burdens, Rationalizing Decisions BikeSnobNYC 2010
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Anyway, in a certain sense has not this modern "woosie" doping infiltrated nearly every aspect of life?
Archive 2010-05-01 BikeSnobNYC 2010
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However, I was driven to distraction by use of "woosie".
Weight of the World: Shouldering Burdens, Rationalizing Decisions BikeSnobNYC 2010
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I see the foundations for the Lance "woosie" argument being laid right now as we speak—way to stay on message, Eben.
Weight of the World: Shouldering Burdens, Rationalizing Decisions BikeSnobNYC 2010
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It was also a time when fixed-gear riders didn't twiddle around on "woosie" gears; they used big, burly, hairy gears, like the 96-tooth chainring on this 1951 Schwinn that was forwarded to me by a reader:
Archive 2010-05-01 BikeSnobNYC 2010
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Really, in the context of human history, this barely qualifies as doping--it's "woosie" cheating.
Archive 2010-05-01 BikeSnobNYC 2010
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While I initially suggested simply stealing the beans from poor farmers in order to keep costs down, it turns out that Just Coffee is one of those "fair trade" operations, so I decided to humor them by letting them engage in their standard "woosie" business practices at considerable cost to me.
Beaching and Moaning: Non-necessity is the Mother of Reinvention BikeSnobNYC 2010
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While I initially suggested simply stealing the beans from poor farmers in order to keep costs down, it turns out that Just Coffee is one of those "fair trade" operations, so I decided to humor them by letting them engage in their standard "woosie" business practices at considerable cost to me.
Archive 2010-06-01 BikeSnobNYC 2010
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It was also a time when fixed-gear riders didn't twiddle around on "woosie" gears; they used big, burly, hairy gears, like the 96-tooth chainring on this 1951 Schwinn that was forwarded to me by a reader:
Weight of the World: Shouldering Burdens, Rationalizing Decisions BikeSnobNYC 2010
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