Tuesday, May 12, 2026
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Meghan Markle Named Most Attractive British Royal

Beating out actual British royals, Meghan Markle has been voted as the most attractive and relatable royal. Let’s not forget, she won’t actually become royalty until she marries Prince Harry May 19.

These results are backed up by science, according to the Daily Mail, which consulted with a Harley Street doctor. Surgeon Dr. Julian Da Silva obtained these results by mapping out Markle’s face and comparing it to the rest of the female royals, concluding that Markle was the hottest one. Yay for science. Markle came closest to scoring 100 percent on the golden ratio, which, according to the ancient Greeks, is said to reveal perfect physical beauty. That was a really long time ago, so we should all take this information with a grain of salt.

Dr. Da Silva claimed that Markle has the perfect nose and that her eyes are positioned exactly right.

Via Daily Mail:

Meghan and Kate both really stood out and got significantly higher marks than the three other princesses.

Meghan has beautiful facial symmetry and gets closer than any other princess to having what the Greeks considered the perfect face.

On a different poll, Hello! Magazine reports that Markle was voted as the most relatable female royal, following closely was Prince Harry, who was the most relatable out of all the monarchs. Again, Markle’s not yet a royal. But good for her.

Marijuana Not Harmful To Kidneys, New Study Finds

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The potential side-effects of marijuana on the kidneys has not been greatly studied, but thanks to new research, we’re starting to understand the extent of the plant’s influence on kidney health.

According to a new study of adults 18-59 in the US, there is no association between current or previous marijuana use and kidney function, as reported in The American Journal of Medicine.

Investigators analyzed a sample of nearly 14,000 healthy adults and did not find any association between marijuana use (past or present) and kidney impairment.

According to the AJM:

There was no statistically significant association between history of marijuana use and the likelihood of developing stage 2 or greater chronic kidney disease. Likewise, they did not observe a statistically significant association between the history of marijuana use and the incidence of microalbuminuria, a moderate increase in the level of urine albumin and a marker of kidney disease.

“Our research provides some reassuring evidence suggesting that there is no determinantal effect of infrequent, relatively light use of marijuana on kidney function among healthy adults under age 60,” said lead investigator Murray A. Mittleman, Associate Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School, and a practicing preventive cardiologist at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center. “However, our research does not address heavy users, the elderly, or those with preexisting chronic kidney disease.”

He says research is still needed to evaluate the impact of marijuana use in adults 60 and over, and among those with existing or at risk of developing kidney disease.

We Are Letting The $30 Billion Medical Marijuana Industry Slip Away

The latest Gallup poll shows that 94 percent of the American population believes that marijuana should be legal for medicinal purposes. But it would appear that the United States has a long way to go before cannabis is considered safe and effective medicine.

As it stands, researchers struggle for the necessary approval to study the effects of the herb and make determinations into its therapeutic benefits. Meanwhile, other countries are making strides to become leading contenders in the realm of medical cannabis. Because of this, the US is on the verge of forfeiting the $30 billion medical marijuana industry.

Researchers like Lyle Craker, who has been a professor at the Stockbridge School of Agriculture since the late 1960s, recently told Bloomberg that he has spent nearly two decades trying to convince the feds to give him a license to grow marijuana. He even tried again after the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) announced last year that it would allow more researchers than just the University of Mississippi to cultivate government marijuana.

But Craker has yet to hear anything from the Feds. “I’m never gonna get the license,” he said.

Although Craker has never used marijuana, he believes the time has come to uncover the mysteries of the plant. “I mean, if it’s going to kill people, let’s know that and get rid of it,” he said. “If it’s going to help people, let’s know that and expand on it.”

Craker believes there is “something wrong” with the DEA and he admits that cannabis has been given a bad name that is “tough to let go of.”

Still, the federal government is not entirely opposed to marijuana. It has allowed Britain’s GW Pharmaceuticals to study cannabis-based drugs for the past several years. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) recently awarded the company approval for its drug Epidiolex, which will be marketed nationwide to epilepsy patients. This is a spray version of the trendy cannabidiol (CBD) – a product similar to what is available at dispensaries in medical marijuana states. Epidiolex will be an expensive treatment, but unlike cannabis products available at the state level, most insurance networks will cover it.

Now that Republicans are expected to cut Medicaid and Medicare, medical marijuana could be more beneficial in the United States than ever. A study published in a 2016 issue of Health Affairs shows that prescription drug spending has dropped in states with medical marijuana programs on the books.

Rick Doblin, founder of the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS), says if the FDA would ever approve “the marijuana plant in bud form,” it would be “incredibly cheap.” It would ultimately become an affordable medicine for people who cannot afford health insurance or who have been eliminated from government subsidized health care.

There is no doubt that medical marijuana could be huge for America. We know this because it already is for other nations.

“Businesses outside of the country are already making billions of dollars,” Doblin said. “Canada, the Netherlands, and Israel all have booming cannabis research sectors; in Israel, some of the work is government-funded. We have enormous opportunity that we’re squandering as a country to reduce health-care costs, build businesses, and create jobs,” he added.

Some blame the Trump administration, namely US Attorney General Jeff Sessions, for preventing the expansion of medical marijuana research. Others say the Obama Administration could have done more to help the cause. But Congress is ultimately responsible for keeping cannabis in the dark ages. Federal lawmakers have had every opportunity to downgrade the Schedule I classification of the cannabis plant. Yet, there is simply not enough support.

5 Well-Known Scientists Who Smoked Marijuana

Science and drugs go hand-in-hand. While not a subject that the nation’s educational system has had the guts to teach, we now know that many brilliant minds consumed mind-altering substances during their quest to change the world. In fact, here are 5 well-known scientists who smoked marijuana.

It is a hard pill to for some die-hard patriots to swallow, the thought that they would not have a light bulb had it not been for Thomas Edison’s lust for speed, or that they may not have had Smartphone technology if Steve Jobs wouldn’t have opened the doors to perception through the use of LSD.

But what about marijuana? It too has had a significant influence on scientific advancements. Here are five scientists that made pot a large part of their research.

Oliver Sacks

The hallucinogenic effects of marijuana fascinated neurologist Oliver Sacks. The author of several books, including the 1973 Awakenings that was adapted to film, told NPR “I think I sometimes just wanted pleasure. I wanted to see a visually and perhaps musically enhanced world. I wanted to know what it was like … . I would often keep notes when I got stoned.”

Francis Crick

Molecular biologist Francis Crick, who is considered the godfather of modern genetics, credited some of his major discoveries surrounding DNA to the effects of hallucigenic drugs and marijuana. Crick, a Nobel Prize winner, was a huge fan of Aldous Huxley. He was inspired by the author’s drug-induced explorations of the mind.

Stephen J. Gould

Scientist Stephen J. Gould, who died in 2002 from lung cancer, once testified that medical marijuana was the only medicine that helped calm his severe nausea. He said, “It is beyond my comprehension that any humane person would withhold such a beneficial substance from people in such great need simply because others use it for different purposes.”

Lester Grinspoon

Although Dr. Lester Grinspoon once believed that marijuana “was a very harmful drug that was unfortunately being used by more and ore foolish young people,” he later changed his tune. Grinspoon published a book in 1971 entitled Marijuana Reconsidered in which he details the effects of marijuana and lays down a plan for legalization.

Carl Sagan

Carl Sagan, who is best known for his work in astrology and the search for intelligent life on other planets, is the scientist who turned Lester Grinspoon on to marijuana. In fact, Sagan wrote an essay for Grinspoon’s book Marijuana Reconsidered. In it, he said “there is a myth” that “great insight … does not survive scrutiny in the morning. I am convinced that this is an error, and that the devastating insights achieved when high are real insights; the main problem is putting these insights in a form acceptable to the quite different self that we are when we’re down the next day.”

Why Does Everyone Hate ‘Ready Player One,’ Which Hasn’t Been Released Yet?

You may not know it, but you’re supposed to already hate Ready Player One. The novel, written by Ernest Cline, was lavishly praised upon its debut for its clear-hearted geekiness and trip down nostalgia lane. It follows the story of Wade Watts, who must complete a tech billionaire’s quest to save his virtual world from preening corporate overlords and secure its future as well as his own.

Once Steven Spielberg set out to adapt the story as a film, a dissenting minority began to grow louder and louder until their voices have become an overwhelming chorus. To be sure, the book is ripe with flaws—somewhat generic sci-fi characterization, confused gender politics, and a tendency to trip into nostalgia orgasms that solely function as a way to ask, “Remember this thing you love?”

But mostly it’s fine. An entertaining, mindless read even when it gets clunky and bloated.

The Ready Player One hatred reached its nadir this week, however, when it unveiled its marketing campaign to recreate various iconic movie posters—either part of the sci-fi canon or 80’s geek culture referenced in the book—replacing the original characters with those from RPO. The move was swiftly met with outrage. Dorkly’s Articles Editor, Tristan Cooper, considered them “a form of assault.” His views were the general consensus.

https://twitter.com/TheMattDWilson/status/971145793217466369

You can check the full poster list at SlashFilm.

South Park memorably parodied the widespread cultural phenomenon with its “Member Berries” storyline, with its main target being JJ Abrams’ Star Wars: The Force Awakens. South Park co-creator Trey Parker also once called Ready Player Onethe most member berry thing ever.”

While the criticism is over the top, it has inspired some worthwhile parodies. Among them is The Good Place writer Demi Adejuyigbe’s “rejected theme song” he wrote for the movie. Also, voice actor and YouTube personality SungWon Cho released a funny spoof of Ready Player One’s admittedly nonsensical first trailer.

https://twitter.com/prozdkp/status/939961378072416256

True, it’s fun to joke about things online. But honestly, people already hating a movie that isn’t even out yet? Sure, most of it’s misdirected ire aimed at the source material of the book, but they’re two separate works. One is a book by Ernest Cline, the other a movie directed by Steven Speilberg, the master of pop art films. Chances are Ready Player One will be better than this criticism would have you believe.

Meghan Markle Spent Her Bridal Shower Doing This

It seems like Meghan Markle and Prince Harry have been engaged forever, and in two weeks, they will finally walk down the aisle and (presumably) say their “I Dos.” And while their ceremony will be a little more high-brow than your average commoner’s, Meghan Markle spent her bridal shower doing what every woman wants to do before her wedding: getting pampered.

The bride-to-be was whisked away to the luxurious and jaw-droppingly gorgeous Soho Farmhouse in Oxfordshire this past weekend. It’s a stunning venue fit for royalty.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BabO1sTBAd3

https://www.instagram.com/p/BQyRGelhp6Q

https://www.instagram.com/p/BIR_VGYgvDN

“Markus Anderson helped throw the shower for Meghan and a small group of mostly her London friends,” an insider shared with E! News. “It’s just a relaxing day of good food and pampering.”

Anderson, if you recall, was (reportedly) one of the couple’s initial matchmakers that set Markle and Harry up on their first date at the Soho House in London  – fitting, seeing as how he’s a consultant for the Soho House Group.

According to the Soho Farmhouse website, the venue is set on 100 acres of Oxfordshire countryside and includes quaint cabins, cottages, spa, a barn cinema and all the luxury you’d want if you were on holiday (or getting ready to wed a Prince).

 

https://www.instagram.com/p/BfDfaEtgl1V

Massachusetts Cannabis Rules OK’d; Sales On Target For July 1

Last November, the voters of Massachusetts voted overwhelmingly to legalize the adult use of recreational marijuana. Since the will of the Massachusetts people became crystal clear, there have been roadblocks along the way that have stalled the law going into effect.

But the state’s regulators this week signed off on the new cannabis rules, removing a major hurdle for a planned retail launch this summer.

Steve Hoffman, chairman of the state’s Cannabis Control Commission, told MassLive.com his agency intends to allow retail stores to open their doors by mid-summer.

“As I said, we need to make sure our staff is in place, we need to make sure we have our technology in place, but our intent is to have a ‘go’ on July 1,” Hoffman told MassLive. “And we are hitting all of the deadlines that we have in the legislation. So I’m feeling good about that.”

Hoffman said that while his agency focuses on state regulations, local jurisdictions will be making their own rules. “We don’t control the decision-making process for cities and towns,” he said.

The tension between state and local regulations have the “potential” to slow down the opening of retail outlets, Hoffman warned.  “It’s certainly possible, I’m hoping it’s not the case.”

There is no official count as to how many cannabis retail stores will be ready to open by July 1.

Commissioners voted to approve warning labels to be placed on all cannabis products which includes the wording “not safe for kids.” Commissioners delayed rules on home delivery, cannabis cafes and movie theaters serving cannabis products.

How Marijuana Helped Me Overcome My Addiction To Pain Pills

As fight fans know, I used to be a professional Mixed Martial Artist. After seven years of not competing professionally, they asked me if I wanted to fight for a lot of money. Sure, why not? I wanted to have a pool in my yard, so I took the fight. I had no injuries, so I thought everything would be okay.

For about six weeks I was good, then every single injury that stopped my career in the first place—all of them and then some—came back with a vengeance. To deal with the pain, I started taking Norco, just one before a workout. The day of the fight I took one in the morning. I didn’t want to have my head in a cloud when I was fighting that day, so I took it at like 10 am.

I won the fight by TKO in the first round. After the fight, I popped a pill, drank some beers, and started imagining my new swimming pool!

Pain Killers Kicked My Butt

Quickly, one pill became two, but at this point it was twice a day. It progressed to five, then seven pills a day. I remember drawing a “9” on the mirror with my wife’s eyeliner—I’M NOT going to take more than nine a day!

Well, I did, and eventually those Norco became Oxycontin. I made the switch to “Oxy” because my doctor told me that there was some acetaminophen in Norco and they would hurt my liver since I took so many. In the end, I was taking 8-10, 80 mg of  Oxy a day.

A long time ago, a friend of mine gave me an 80 mg Oxycontin. He thought I knew not to take the whole thing, I didn’t know, I took the whole thing. He freaked out saying, “Oh man, I am going to have to stay with you now, you’re gonna feel weird.” Boy, was he right. I was so looped up, couldn’t eat, sweating, dizzy, it was crazy for hours. I thought I could never do anything on those pills. Well, at the end of my addiction I took 8-10 of those a day. It’s crazy how the body adapts and breaks things down—super bad for you, though!

I Became An Addict

I realized I was an addict, so I started to clean up using Suboxone—it’s like methadone they use for heroin. I asked the doctor for it. At first, he didn’t want to give it to me. I became very angry at him and told him he turned me into an addict and I needed those pills NOW. I got them right away.

Now, normally when you start with Suboxone, you should wind that stuff down after a week or 10 days and not stay on it for longer, but nobody told me to do that. Unlike pain medication, it’s stuff that you can decrease—still the side effects are nuts.

But I was on that crap for three and a half years until I heard Dr. Drew on the radio in my car saying, “Suboxone is the new methadone.” Well, that got my attention! I went home and started to research it.

I was an idiot because I never researched it before. Ah well, at least I now knew I had to quit that stuff.

The first time you take Suboxone, they say you should wait at least 12 hours after your last pain pill. I added 4 hours extra just to make sure, so 16 hours.

Well that was still too soon…

People, if somebody here is addicted to pain pills and wants to use Suboxone to get off it—pay close attention now.

If you take it too soon, you will be thrown into a full-on detox in less than 10 minutes. So you go from 0-100 in less than 10 minutes.

Do You Want To Experience Evil?

Now, I experienced a LOT of crazy stuff in my life, but you want to experience evil? Take my word, this was it! My skin looked like a lizard’s—goosebumps like you have never seen them before. All the hairs on my arms were standing up straight, and I mean EVERY hair. And it felt like something was in my stomach moving around, and it didn’t feel like a good thing—very scary.

I was on the phone with 911 in my car (because of course this all happened when I was driving), but I couldn’t verbalize where I was because I was in a state I have never been in before. Horrible and intense feeling, sweating like a maniac, screaming, hitting the steering wheel, people looking at me from other cars. Were they thinking I was a psychopath?

Just Google “Took Suboxone too soon” and read the horror stories from people who had the same thing happen to them—it’s quite crazy.

Thankfully, I found out a friend was close by who told me he had 12 Norco with him and he was at a place I have been many times before, so I knew how to drive there.

Tears coming out of my eyes without crying, ever had that? Like the floodgates have opened on the outside corners of both my eyes, it was the weirdest thing. I found my buddy and asked him for the pills. He gave them to me. I took all 12 pills, I bought cigarettes (I don’t smoke) thinking the nicotine would calm me down—I was really desperate.

By the way, my buddy freaked out because he takes half a Norco when he has pain, I just took all 12 in front of him. That’s why I tell people who start with pain pills that you will NOT win, you are only going to need more and it will ALWAYS end badly.

Enough Is Enough

When I calmed down, I drove to a place my wife called for me to check in, and a person was waiting for me. I remember they wanted to give me the Suboxone within 20 hours of me taking those 12 pills. I told them NO (while shaking and sweating like crazy from the detox). Four more hours I waited—I never wanted to experience that whole episode again.

OK, so now I was on Suboxone.

Let’s name some side effects: Sweating, high blood pressure, double vision, falling asleep behind the wheel, falling asleep while watching TV/movie theater, peeing took a long time, my heart rate was over 80 every morning in bed, crushed my testosterone level to 5, not 500 or 50, no, 1,2,3,4, 5! The doctor never even heard of that number and asked me how on earth I could come out of bed since even women have a higher level than I have. Well, I said, “happy thoughts and just get out, I don’t want to get out of bed, but I have to”—it was really hard.

So, I wanted to stop that crap, first I tried to do it “cold turkey,” but after five days my daughter had a pool party at our home and my wife needed help. There was no way I could help, I was so sick. I was in bed the whole day, shivering, sweating, not able to eat, just feeling horrible, so I restarted the Suboxone, thinking at least this way I could help her out with the party.

Knocking Out The Pills 

I came up with a better approach. Slowly, I started to decrease the dosage, went from 1.5 pills to 1, to ¾, to a half and from that to ¼, half of that quarter, then half of that, then that once every other day and then I stopped. I was done!

I kicked it in 10 days after I completely stopped with the last little tiny piece. Apparently, a record for my doctor, he could not believe how I did it. But I just drank a lot of water, loads of amino acids, good food (you don’t wanna eat but you HAVE to do it) and training every day on a treadmill. I walked on an incline for 30 minutes, which was SUPER hard because you feel like gravity pulls you into the floor, there is no other way to describe this, you feel 800 pounds and you really don’t want to do anything but stay in bed. I just pushed through it because I had my sight set on the end goal.

Man, in those 10 days I needed to wear shades everywhere because I became very sensitive to light. After those 10 days, my smell became much better. No more sweating. No more 5 minutes peeing. My heart rate returned to 55. Blood pressure was going down. NEVER falling asleep or even feeling tired during the day again. No more double vision.

I mean everything bad I had, disappeared in weeks, it was amazing.

Now since then I have still taken some pain pills. I had three neck surgeries after I stopped (4 in total). You get them after the surgery, but I wind down within a week. Sometimes when my back kills me and I have to travel, I take two with me. But only a few times a year.

Pure CBD Oil Changed My Life

Last year when I got my Receptra Pro for the first time, I had a trip to San Diego which is a 2.5-hour drive, my back was hurting so I asked my wife to give me a Vicodin (I still let her hide them, just to be sure, haha). She gave me one, I wanted to take it immediately but I thought, “You know what? I’ll try this Receptra first and see what it does and if it doesn’t help—then I will take the Vicodin.”

So I took a full dropper and was on my way. I eat something about 10 minutes after I take a pill or liquid, because that throws it into my system much faster. Otherwise you might be waiting for 2 hours, especially when you ate 30 minutes before you took the medication, it will take a long time.

But I ate something in the car and boom! Within 20 minutes I called my wife saying I couldn’t believe it, it’s like almost the same feeling, I am warm, I feel good and the pain is gone. And you know what’s even better? It’s NON-addictive!

Workouts With Receptra CBD

So now I started to use it before training. I wanted to see if it keeps the lactic acid away, and boy it does! You can train harder than normal, so I won’t advise you to use this when you haven’t trained for a while. It will make your workout much easier, so you don’t feel where you normally would have stopped. So, if this is your first workout in a while, you are going to be in pain the next day, so do it only when you already went through your muscle aches from prior workouts.

My daughters use the cream, gets rid of zits overnight, they love it, all their friends love it. Your skin gets better, also from the oil you take orally. It’s good for your nervous system, it calms you down, another great thing, haha! If you have to drive in traffic a lot, trust me, take some CBD. Your reflexes will be totally fine, you won’t be high, but you’ll feel relaxed, it helps a lot.

I love everything about it, the more I hear the more I love it. Research shows it is already curing certain people. The list of research showing the positive effects of Pure CBD Oil on health is too long to mention here. But I encourage you to do some research of your own. If there is something that is bothering you, and you think CBD might help, just search for it on the web and chances are you’ll find some info.

Receptra Naturals Pure CBD Oil has really changed my life for the better. I defeated the pain pills with the support of my family and friends. Receptra has helped me to stay focused on health and a life without those pills. But like I said, it isn’t only for pain. CBD is natural, and healthy for everyone!

In other words, you would be weird NOT to take it!

Godspeed!

Veterans With PTSD Sue After Being Discharged For Using Medical Marijuana

Tens of thousands of American military veterans with mental health issues were unfairly given less-than-honorable discharges, barring them from accessing Veterans Affairs benefits, according to a lawsuit filed last week.

“The American public needs to know that hundreds of thousands of military veterans with service-connected PTSD … are being denied support and VA resources because of an unfair discharge status,” said ex-Marine Tyson Manker, who filed the suit.

According to a news report from the Stars & Stripes:

By the age of 21, Marine Corps Cpl. Tyson Manker led infantrymen into battle in the 2003 invasion of Iraq. His actions as a Marine garnered him the Presidential Unit Citation and other awards, yet the military doesn’t consider his service as honorable.

Manker endured intense combat, saw civilians killed and witnessed the death of a close friend – experiences that caused nightmares and other symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder that only worsened when he returned home.

Later that year while on leave, Manker was caught with marijuana, which he used to self-medicate. He was kicked out of the Marine Corps for misconduct with an other-than-honorable discharge.

Manker, now a 36-year-old lawyer in Illinois, filed the class-action suit in federal court in Connecticut.  The veterans are represented by students with Yale Law School’s Veterans Legal Services Clinic, which filed a similar lawsuit against the Army last year, according to the Associated Press.

Since September 11, 2001, more than two million Americans have served in either Iraq or Afghanistan. Nearly a third of these service members suffer from PTSD and related mental health conditions, but the military continues to issue less-than-honorable (“bad paper”) discharges at historically high rates, often for minor infractions that are attributable to undiagnosed mental health issues, according to the lawsuit.

When these veterans apply for a change in their discharge characterization to the Naval Discharge Review Board (NDRB) — which handles applications from former sailors and Marines — these veterans are unlawfully denied without the benefit of Department of Defense policies meant to ease this process, according to the lawsuit.

Nearly a third of the more than 2 million Americans who have served in either Iraq or Afghanistan suffer from PTSD and related mental-health conditions. The less-than-honorable discharges received are often attributable to those mental health issues.

“We’re in a system of punishing those who serve on the frontlines,” said Manker, who has been haunted by his other-than-honorable status for years. “My hope with this is that the discharge review board will start following the law, plain and simple,” Manker said. “It’s about principle. It’s about restoring honor.”

The suit has the potential to include tens of thousands of veterans.

Made-Up ‘Simpsons’ Word Was Just Added To Very Real Dictionary

As the internet continues to reshape how we live, new words are necessary to explain current predicaments and actions. But where do these words come from?

Some answers are easier than others. Take for example the word “subtweet.”  It’s among the 850 words the Merriam-Webster dictionary added this week to its lexicographical tome. It is a portmanteau of the words “subliminal” and “tweet,” which basically sums up what the word means.

Another word joining the Merriam-Webster dictionary, however, started like so many other contemporary pop culture phenomenonThe Simpsons. In the Season 9 episode “Lisa the Iconoclast,” Lisa investigates the history of Springfield’s founding father, Jebediah Springfield, and discovers he was a murderous pirate that once clashed with George Washington.

At the beginning of the episode, we’re treated to a propaganda film explaining the city’s origins that includes the immortal phrase, “A noble spirit embiggens the smallest man.”

Now “embiggens” has officially entered the dictionary as a legitimate word. As a Simpsons nod, Merriam-Webster states that 1996 was its first known usage, which is the year “Lisa the Iconoclast” aired. Here is what the word’s definition looks like.

Via Merriam-Webster:

Definition of embiggen

embiggenedembiggening

transitive verb

informal + humorous

: to make bigger or more expansive : enlarge, expand

  • This incredible chart was the final product. (Click to embiggen.) —Erik Malinowski
  • There are many painters who rely on computers as a tool or arbitrary gimmick, but the recent striated abstract paintings of Linda Day translate digital structures into painting language in a seamless way that embiggens both. —Doug Harvey

Can’t wait until the dictionary embiggens next year to see what words get added!

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